30 years after CMU founded the nation’s first computer science college, it continues to be ranked #1 in higher ed. Martial Hebert, director of theCarnegie Mellon Robotics Institute - RI, has been named the new dean of the Carnegie Mellon University School of Computer Science. He is a world-renowned researcher in computer vision and robotics. Hebert will oversee the school’s 270 faculty members of 2,300 of the best students in the country. “The School of Computer Science has never been better positioned to have a real-world impact than it is now.”
https://cmu.is/DeanHebert
https://cmu.is/DeanHebert
學院有2300學生,270位教師
Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science
SCS today[edit]
Organizational units[edit]
- Computer Science Department (CSD)
- Computational Biology Department (CBD)
- Robotics Institute (RI)
- Institute for Software Research (ISR): Its research and education focus is on software systems, which spans not only classical software engineering but also topics such as economics, social and organizational issues, public policy, and privacy. ISR is a distinct entity from the Software Engineering Institute (SEI). SEI is a FFRDC, which is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Defense and does not offer educational programs.
- Human-Computer Interaction Institute (HCII)
- Language Technologies Institute (LTI)
- Machine Learning Department (MLD)
Doctoral programs[edit]
- PhD in Computational Biology (joint with University of Pittsburgh) [2]
- PhD in Computer Science
- PhD in Computer Science/Dual Degree Portugal
- PhD in Computer Science/Neural Basis of Cognition
- PhD in Human-Computer Interaction
- PhD in Language and Information Technologies
- PhD in Language and Information Technologies/Dual Degree Portugal
- PhD in Machine Learning
- PhD in Machine Learning/Neural Basis of Cognition
- PhD in Robotics
- PhD in Robotics/Neural Basis of Cognition
- M.D./PhD in Robotics
- PhD in Societal Computing[3]
- PhD in Software Engineering
- Joint PhD in Statistics & Machine Learning
Wikipedia 的機構RI之資料,
The Robotics Institute (RI) is a division of the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. A June 2014 article in Robotics Business Review magazine calls it "the world's best robotics research facility" and a "pacesetter in robotics research and education."[1]
The Robotics Institute focuses on bringing robotics into everyday activities. Its faculty members and graduate students examine a variety of fields, including space robotics, medical robotics, industrial systems, computer vision and artificial intelligence, and they develop a broad array of robotics systems and capabilities.[1]
Established in 1979 by Raj Reddy,[2] the RI was the first robotics department at any U.S. university.[3] In 1988, CMU became the first university in the world offering a Ph.D. in Robotics.
In 2012, the faculty, staff, students and postdocs numbered over 500,[3] and the RI annual budget exceeded $65M,[3] making the RI one of the largest robotics research organizations in the world.[4]
The RI occupies facilities on the Carnegie Mellon main campus as well as in the Lawrenceville and Hazelwood neighborhoods of Pittsburgh, totaling almost 200,000 sq. ft of indoor space and 40 acres of outdoor test facilities.
Contents
Major centers[edit]
The National Robotics Engineering Center (NREC) was established in 1996 as the commercial arm of the RI, with the intention of applying robotic technology to commercial and defense applications. It has partnered with more than 300 companies such as General Motors, GE Ventures, Google, Apple and the U.S. military.
In September 2015, the NREC secured a $5.5 million gift from the car transport company, Uber, to support three robotics fellowships and research directed at developing safe, self-driving cars.[5] This donation was made roughly seven months after Uber poached 40 NREC scientists, including its director, Tony Stenz, and other key program leaders, while the two organizations closely collaborated on driverless technologies.[6]
The Field Robotics Center (FRC) has developed a number of significant robots, including Sandstorm and H1ghlander, which finished second and third in the 2005 DARPA Grand Challenge, and Boss, which won the 2007 DARPA Grand Challenge.
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