Dr. Ken Goldberg
Ken Goldberg, Ph.D., FIEEE, FWTN
developed the first robot with a web interface and
is
Professor of Industrial Engineering and Operations Research (IEOR),
with
secondary appointment in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
(EECS), and tertiary appointment in the School of Information
(I-School) at the University of California at Berkeley.
Ken edited
The Robot in the Garden: Telerobotics and Telepistemology in the Age
of
the Internet,
coedited
Beyond Webcams: An Introduction to Online Robots and
Algorithmic Foundations of Robotics V (Springer Tracts in Advanced
Robotics),
authored
Algorithmic Foundations of Robotics, and
coauthored
Computing a Statistical Distribution of Stable Poses for a
Polyhedron,
Exact Algorithms for Single Frame Selection on Multi-Axis
Satellites,
Optimization of HDR Brachytherapy Dose Distributions using Linear
Programming with Penalty Costs,
Blades: A New Class of Geometric Primitives for Feeding 3D
Parts on Vibratory Tracks,
Automated Intruder Tracking using Particle Filtering and a Network
of
Binary Motion Sensors,
and
Collaborative teleoperation using networked spatial dynamic
voting.
Read the
full list of his publications!
His patents include
Apparatus and method for recommending to an individual
selective information contained within a computer network,
Processor and method for developing a set of admissible
fixture designs for a workpiece,
Low friction gripper, and
A Television Event Marking System.
Ken is Vice President of Technical Activities, IEEE Robotics
and Automation Society; Director, The Art, Technology, and Culture
Colloquium, UC
Berkeley; CoFounder, IEEE Transactions on Automation Science and
Engineering (T-ASE). Founding Chair, T-ASE Advisory Board;
Editorial Advisory Board,
IEEE Spectrum Magazine,
Member, IEEE Fellow Evaluation Committee for the Robotics
and Automation Society;
Member, Executive Committee, UC Berkeley Center for New
Media;
Editorial Advisory Board,
Springer-Verlag Book Series:
Advanced Robotics;
Chair, Academic Advisory Committee, Berkeley Art
Museum/Pacific Film Archive;
Member (ex-officio), Board of Trustees, Berkeley Art
Museum/Pacific Film Archive;
Member, UC Berkeley Faculty Senate Committee on Computing
and Communications (COMP);
Member, University of California, Intercampus
Telecommunications and Technology (ITTP) Committee;
Member, UC Berkeley Faculty Senate Committee on Computing
and Communications (COMP);
Member, Long Range Planning Committee, IEEE Robotics and
Automation Society; and
Member, IEEE Robotics and Automation Society Publications
Board.
He earned a Dual Degree:
BSE Electrical Engineering, Moore School
of Engineering; BS Economics, Wharton School of Business, University of
Pennsylvania, summa cum laude in 1984 with his Junior Year being
conducted abroad at Edinburgh University, Edinburgh, Scotland.
He earned his M.S. and Ph.D. in 1990 from
School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon
University where his Dissertation was
“Stochastic Plans for Robotic
Manipulation”
and was also Visiting Researcher at Center for Manufacturing Systems
and
Robotics, Israel Institute of Technology (Technion), Haifa, Israel in
1986 during these studies.
Ken was awarded the
the Joseph F. Engelberger Robotics Award in 2000, a fellowship from the
World Technology Network (WTN) in
2003
and a fellowship from the
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
in 2005.
The Tribe, a short film he co-wrote, was selected for the
2006
Sundance
Film Festival and the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival.
Watch,
listen, or
read his “Conversations with History”
interview by the Institute
of International Studies.
Read
his East Bay Express interview.