Stephen Balakirsky

Stephen Balakirsky
stephen.balakirsky@gtri.gatech.edu

Stephen Balakirsky is the Chief Scientist for the Aerospace, Transportation & Advanced Systems Laboratory at the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI), and the Director of Technical Initiatives at the Petit Institute for Bioengineering and Bioscience (IBB) at Georgia Tech.

Balakirsky’s research interests include robotic architectures, planning, bio-automation, robotic standards, and autonomous systems testing. His work in knowledge driven robotics couples real-time sensors and knowledge repositories to allow for flexibility and agility in robotic systems ranging from assembly and manufacturing systems to surveillance and logistics systems. The framework promotes software reuse and the ability to detect and correct for execution errors.

Previously, Balakirsky worked as a project manager at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and was a senior research engineer at the Army Research Laboratory (ARL). At ARL, Balakirsky performed mobile robotics research in several areas, including command and control, mapping, human-computer interfaces, target tracking, vision processing and tele-operated control.

Regents' Researcher; Georgia Tech Research Institute
Director of Technical Initiatives; IBB
Chief Scientist | Aerospace, Transportation & Advanced Systems Laboratory (ATAS); GTRI
Phone
404.407.8547
Office
Food Processing Technology Building, 640 Strong St, Atlanta, GA 30318
Additional Research

Robotics; Planning; Knowledge Representation; Ontologies

Research Focus Areas
GTRI
Geogia Tech Research Institute > Aerospace, Transportation & Advanced Systems Laboratory
Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=mMANqk8AAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate
Stephen
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Dhruv Batra

Dhruv Batra
dbatra@gatech.edu
Website

Dhruv Batra is an Associate Professor in the School of Interactive Computing at Georgia Tech. His research interests lie at the intersection of machine learning, computer vision, natural language processing, and AI, with a focus on developing intelligent systems that are able to concisely summarize their beliefs about the world with diverse predictions, integrate information and beliefs across different sub-components or `modules' of AI (vision, language, reasoning, dialog), and interpretable AI systems that provide explanations and justifications for why they believe what they believe. In past, he has also worked on topics such as interactive co-segmentation of large image collections, human body pose estIMaTion, action recognition, depth estIMaTion, and distributed optimization for inference and learning in probabilistic graphical models. He is a recipient of the Office of Naval Research (ONR) Young Investigator Program (YIP) award (2016), the National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER award (2014), Army Research Office (ARO) Young Investigator Program (YIP) award (2014), Virginia Tech College of Engineering Outstanding New Assistant Professor award (2015), two Google Faculty Research Awards (2013, 2015), Amazon Academic Research award (2016), Carnegie Mellon Dean's Fellowship (2007), and several best paper awards (EMNLP 2017, ICML workshop on Visualization for Deep Learning 2016, ICCV workshop Object Understanding for Interaction 2016) and teaching commendations at Virginia Tech. His research is supported by NSF, ARO, ARL, ONR, DARPA, Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and NVIDIA. Research from his lab has been extensively covered in the media (with varying levels of accuracy) at CNN, BBC, CNBC, Bloomberg Business, The Boston Globe, MIT Technology Review, Newsweek, The Verge, New Scientist, and NPR. From 2013-2016, he was an Assistant Professor in the Bradley Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Virginia Tech, where he led the VT Machine Learning & Perception group and was a member of the Virginia Center for Autonomous Systems (VaCAS) and the VT Discovery Analytics Center (DAC). From 2010-2012, he was a Research Assistant Professor at Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago (TTIC), a philanthropically endowed academic computer science institute located on the University of Chicago campus. He received his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from Carnegie Mellon University in 2007 and 2010 respectively, advised by Tsuhan Chen. In past, he has held visiting positions at the Machine Learning Department at CMU, CSAIL MIT, Microsoft Research, and Facebook AI Research.

Associate Professor; School of Interactive Computing
Additional Research

Machine Learning; Computer Vision; Artificial Intelligence

Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=_bs7PqgAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate
Personal Research Website
Dhruv
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Sonia Chernova

Sonia Chernova
chernova@cc.gatech.edu
Personal Page

I am an Associate Professor in the School of Interactive Computing at Georgia Tech. I received my Ph.D. and B.S. degrees in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University, and held positions as a Postdoctoral Associate at the MIT Media Lab and as Assistant Professor at Worcester Polytechnic Institute prior to joining Georgia Tech. I direct the Robot Autonomy and Interactive Learning (RAIL) lab, where we work on developing robots that are able to effectively operate in human environments. My research interests span robotics and artificial intelligence, including semantic reasoning, adjustable autonomy, human computation and cloud robotics. Please visit the RAIL lab website for a description of our latest projects.

Associate Professor; School of Interactive Computing
Director; Robot Autonomy and Interactive Learning (RAIL) Lab
Phone
404.385.4753
Additional Research

Robotics; Artificial Intelligence; Semantic Reasoning; Adjustable Autonomy; Human Computation and Cloud Robotics.

Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=EYo_WkEAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate
RAIL Lab
Sonia
Chernova
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Shreyas Kousik

Shreyas Kousik
shreyas.kousik@me.gatech.edu
Lab Webpage

Shreyas Kousik is an assistant professor in the George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering. Previously, Shreyas was a postdoctoral scholar at Stanford University, working in the ASL under Prof. Marco. Kousik completed a postdoc with Prof. Grace Gao in the NAV Lab. He received his Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Michigan, advised by Prof. Ram Vasudevan in the ROAHM Lab and received his undergraduate degree in Mechanical Engineering at Georgia Tech, advised by Prof. Antonia Antoniou.

Kousik’s research is focused on guaranteeing safety in autonomy via collision avoidance methods for robots. His lab’s goal is to translate safety in math to safety on real robots by exploring ways to model uncertainty from autonomous perception and estimation systems and ensure that these models are practical for downstream planning and control tasks

Assistant Professor
Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=cb0xkZ4AAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate
Github
Shreyas
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Tom Sammon

Tom Sammon
tom.sammon@innovate.gatech.edu
Georgia Manufacturing Extension Partnership

Tom Sammon focuses on implementing lean manufacturing practices and helping companies develop capital equipment applications.

Project Manager; Georgia Manufacturing Extension Partnership
Phone
770.301.2100
Additional Research

Automation; Robotics; Conveyor Systems; Equipment Design; Lean Manufacturing; Plant Layout and Design; Plant Management; Project Management; Problem Solving.

Research Focus Areas
IRI And Role
Tom
Sammon
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Karen M. Feigh

Karen M. Feigh
karen.feigh@gatech.edu
AE Page

Karen M. Feigh is a Professor at Georgia Tech's Daniel Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering with a courtesy appointment in the School of Interactive Computing. As the director of the Georgia Tech Cognitive Engineering Center, she leads a research and education program focused on the computational cognitive modeling and design of cognitive work support systems and technologies to improve the performance of socio-technical systems. She is responsible for undergraduate and graduate level instruction in the areas of flight dynamics, human reliability analysis methods, human factors, human-automation interaction and cognitive engineering. Feigh has over 14 years of relevant research and design experience in fast-time air traffic simulation, ethnographic studies, airline operation control centers, synthetic vision systems for helicopters, expert systems for air traffic control towers, human extra-vehicular activities in space, and the impact of context on undersea warfighters. Recently her work has focused on human-autonomy teaming and the human experience of machine learning across a number of domains.

Feigh has served as both Co-PI and PI on a number of FAA, NIA, ONR, NSF and NASA sponsored projects. As part of her research, Feigh has published 35 scholarly papers in the field of Cognitive Engineering with primary emphasis on the aviation industry. She serves as an Associate Editor for the Journal of Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making. She previously served as the Chair to the Human Factor and Ergonomics Society’s Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making Technical Group, and on the National Research Council’s Aeronautics and Space Engineering Board (ASEB).

Professor & Associate Chair for Research; School of Aerospace Engineering
Director; Georgia Tech Cognitive Engineering Center
Phone
404.385.7686
Office
MK 321-3
Additional Research

Cognitive engineering; human factors; adaptive automation

Research Focus Areas
Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=y1cHmVMAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate
Karen M.
Feigh
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Jeff Garbers

Jeff  Garbers
jeff.garbers@gatech.edu

Jeff comes to Quadrant-i after 35 years in the personal computing industry, focusing on communications, mobility, Internet services, and usability. As a software developer and architect from the earliest days of the PC, Jeff has been instrumental in creating applications and co-founding companies that led their markets and were highly regarded by customers and the industry. He co-founded his first startup with his Georgia Tech graduate advisor in 1982, and sold his most recent company, Rover Apps, in 2013. Jeff earned an AB in Mathematics from Wabash College, and his MS in Information and Computer Science from Georgia Tech. His personal passions include FIRST Robotics and STEM education for young people.

Quadrant-i
Principal
Office
of Commercialization
Additional Research

Collaborative Robotics; Innovation

Research Focus Areas
IRI And Role
Jeff
Garbers
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Michael (Mick) West

Michael (Mick) West
mick.west@ece.gatech.edu

Michael (Mick) West joined ECE from the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) in 2022. He received his Ph.D. in electrical engineering from the University of Hawaii (UH) in 2006 and has over 28 years of professional experience with over 40 refereed journals and conference papers. 

West specializes in the development unmanned systems in extreme environments (under-ice, planetary, deep ocean, polar). He has been an invited speaker for United States Congressional leaders and their staff and top military personnel in the development of roadmaps for advancing current robotics research. He has served as PI on several Unmanned Systems programs developing novel enabling technologies including advanced control and power systems on underwater, ground, air and space platforms. West developed the first-of-its-kind under-ice vehicle, Icefin, in order to gather information about the changing polar ice and provide insight into areas of climate science, as well as biology and planetary science. The vehicle has been deployed over five seasons through the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica and provided never before seen images and scientific data of the Antarctic seafloor.

Senior Research Scientist; Georgia Tech Research Institute
Phone
404-407-8638
Office
Klaus 2316
Additional Research

Collaborative Robotics

Research Focus Areas
IRI And Role
Michael (Mick)
West
E.
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Sang-Won Leigh

Sang-Won Leigh
sang.leigh@design.gatech.edu
Industrial Design Profile Page

Sang's research and art practice focuses on robotic and computational tools that work together with human users. His vision proposes extreme synergies between machine tools and humans, with technology essentially becoming a natural extension of our hands. This way, he challenges the fear and criticism around AI and automation that they replace human endeavors, by showing how symbiotic machines can unlock new human explorations and aesthetics. The impact of his research spans from publications in top tier HCI conferences such as CHI, TEI, and NIME, journals including Leonardo and IEEE Pervasive Computing, to design awards and art exhibitions. Several of his work were awarded the Fast Company Innovation by Design Award, and have been shown in art exhibitions at SIGGRAPH ASIA, CHI, TEI, and more. His work A Flying Pantograph was included in the Otherly Space / Knowledge exhibition at the Asia Culture Center along with some of the most prominent new media artists today. In 2014, He was an artist-in-residence at Microsoft Research Studio 99 where he created Remnance of Form - an interactive light and shadow installation. His work has received extensive media coverage from BBC, WIRED, Discovery, Fast Company and so on, and he was invited to national and international events including Sebasi+Pan, TEDx events, Seoul Digital Forum, and more. He is starting at Georgia Tech Industrial Design as an assistant professor. He has helped Artmatr in the development of a machine painting technology and its creative use through collaboration with some of today's most prominent painters. He received his Ph.D. from MIT Media Lab in 2018. Prior to that, he was a software engineer at Samsung Electronics where he led the software development of eyeCan, an open-source DIY eye-mouse designed for people with motor disability. This project became the foundation of Samsung's C-LAB. He received his Bachelor and Master of Science from KAIST, focusing on 3D Computer Vision and Machine Learning.

Assistant Professor; School of Industrial Design
Phone
N/A
Additional Research

HCI; Robotics; Media Arts

Research Focus Areas
IRI And Role
University, College, and School/Department
Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=5PS-lv8AAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate
Personal Website
Sang-Won
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Andrea L. Thomaz

Andrea L. Thomaz
athomaz@ece.utexas.edu
Personal Website
Professor; School of Interactive Computing
Additional Research

Human-Robot Interaction; Artificial Intelligence; Interactive Machine Learning

Research Focus Areas
IRI And Role
Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=jIs-Y2gAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate
Andrea L.
Thomaz
L.
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