Participants from the public and private sectors are invited to attend the JHU Robotics Industry Day, hosted by the Laboratory for Computational Sensing and Robotics, to see cutting-edge robotics research and explore university-corporate partnerships.
Meet robotics experts at Hopkins and discuss furthering robotics research, education and commercialization in healthcare, manufacturing, defense, space exploration, environmental science and transportation.
The Laboratory for Computational Sensing and Robotics will highlight its elite robotics students and showcase cutting-edge research projects in areas that include Medical Robotics, Extreme Environments Robotics, Human-Machine Systems for Manufacturing, BioRobotics and more. JHU Robotics Industry Day will take place from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Hackerman Hall on the Homewood Campus at Johns Hopkins University.
Robotics Industry Day will provide top companies and organizations in the private and public sectors with access to the LCSR’s forward-thinking, solution-driven students. The event will also serve as an informal opportunity to explore university-industry partnerships.
You will experience dynamic presentations and discussions, observe live demonstrations, and participate in speed networking sessions that afford you the opportunity to meet Johns Hopkins most talented robotics students before they graduate.
Please contact Rose Chase if you have any questions.
LEVERING GREAT HALL
8:00 Registration and Continental Breakfast
8:30 Welcome: Larry Nagahara, Associate Dean for Research, JHU
8:35 Introduction to LCSR: Director Russell H. Taylor
8:55 Research and Commercialization Highlights
9:00 Louis Whitcomb, LCSR
9:10 Noah Cowan & Erin Sutton, LCSR
9:20 Marin Kolilarov, LCSR
9:30 Philipp Stolka, Clear Guide Medical
9:40 Mehran Armand, APL and LCSR
9:50 Stephen L. Hoffman, Sanaria, Inc.
10:00 COFFEE BREAK
10:10 Bernhard Fuerst, LCSR
10:20 Bruce Lichorowic, Galen Robotics
10:30 David Narrow, Sonavex, Inc.
10:40 Kelleher Guerin & Benjamin Gibbs, READY Robotics
10:50 Promit Roy, Max and Haley LLC
11:00 John Krakauer, Malone Center for Engineering in Healthcare Update, JHU
11:10 New Faculty Talks
11:10 – Muyinatu Bell
11:30 – Jeremy D. Brown
HACKERMAN HALL B17 LOBBY
12:00-1:15 LUNCH
HACKERMAN HALL ROBOTORIUM
12:00-1:15 Poster + Demo Sessions
HACKERMAN HALL B17
1:15-3:00 Student and Industry Speed Networking
Please contact Rose Chase if you have any questions. Download PDF of Campus Map & Schedule of Events
This is the Fall 2017 Kick-Off Seminar, presenting an overview of LCSR, useful information, and an introduction to the faculty and labs.
Robots hold promise in assisting people in a variety of domains including healthcare services, household chores, collaborative manufacturing, and educational learning. In supporting these activities, robots need to engage with humans in cooperative interactions in which they work together toward a common goal in a socially intuitive manner. Such interactions require robots to coordinate actions, predict task intent, direct attention, and convey relevant information to human partners. In this talk, I will present how techniques in human-computer interaction, artificial intelligence, and robotics can be applied in a principled manner to create and study intuitive interactions between humans and robots. I will demonstrate social, cognitive, and task benefits of effective human-robot teams in various application contexts. I will discuss broader impacts of my research, as well as future directions of my research focusing on intuitive computing.
Chien-Ming Huang is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science in the Whiting School of Engineering at The Johns Hopkins University. His research seeks to enable intuitive interactions between humans and machines to augment human capabilities. Dr. Huang received his Ph.D. in Computer Science at the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 2015, his M.S. in Computer Science at the Georgia Institute of Technology in 2010, and his B.S. in Computer Science at National Chiao Tung University in Taiwan in 2006. His research has been awarded a Best Paper Runner-Up at Robotics: Science and Systems (RSS) 2013 and has received media coverage from MIT Technology Review, Tech Insider, and Science Nation.