Ken Goldberg
Ken Goldberg | |
---|---|
Born |
1961 (age 52–53) Mill Valley, California |
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Professor |
Known for | art, robotics research |
Spouse(s) | Tiffany Shlain |
Website | |
goldberg.berkeley.edu |
Kenneth Y. Goldberg (born 1961) is the craigslist Distinguished Professor of New Media and Professor of Industrial Engineering and Operations Research (IEOR), with joint appointments in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS), Art Practice, and the School of Information at the University of California, Berkeley.[1][2][3][4] Goldberg also holds an appointment in the Department of Radiation Oncology at the University of California, San Francisco. He is an artist, writer, inventor, and researcher in the field of robotics and automation.
Background
Goldberg was born in Ibadan, Nigeria and grew up in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.[5] He received a BS in Electrical Engineering and BS in Economics, summa cum laude, from the University of Pennsylvania in 1984. Goldberg also received his Ph.D. in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University in 1990.[6] He then taught in the department of computer science at the University of Southern California from 1991–1995 and was visiting faculty in 2000 at MIT.[5]
Career
Robotics
Goldberg and his students have published over 170 peer-reviewed technical papers on algorithms for Robotics, Automation, and social information filtering.[7] Goldberg leads the UC Berkeley Automation Sciences Lab, which pursues research in Cloud Robotics and Automation, Social Information Retrieval using geometric algorithms, and Algorithmic Automation for Feeding, Fixturing, Grasping, with an emphasis on geometric algorithms that minimize sensing and actuation.[8][9]
In his PhD dissertation, Goldberg developed the first algorithm for orienting (feeding) polygonal parts and proved that the algorithm can be used to orient any part up to rotational symmetry.[10] He also patented the kinematically yielding gripper, a new robot gripper that complies passively to hold parts securely without sensing. Goldberg is Co-Founder and Editor-in-Chief of the IEEE Transactions on Automation Science and Engineering.[11] His research has resulted in eight United States patents.[12]
Goldberg is credited with developing the first robot with web interface (August 1994). His subsequent project, the Telegarden, allowed remote visitors, via the Internet, to view, water, and plant seeds in a living garden.[13] This project was online continuously for nine years in the lobby of the Ars Electronica Center.[14] Goldberg is a leading researcher in networked telerobotics and Cloud Robotics and has developed a series of collaborative tele-operation systems such as the Tele-Actor, in which a human moves through a remote environment guided by remote participants via the Internet.[15]
Goldberg is co-founder, with Ayorkor Korseh, of the African Robotics Network (AFRON), established in 2012 to promote communication and collaborations that will enhance robotics-related education, research, and industry on the continent of Africa.[16] AFRON's Ultra-Affordable Educational Robot design competition was recognized with a Tribeca Distruptive Innovation Award in 2013.[17]
Goldberg is Co-Founder of the Berkeley Center for New Media and served as its Director from 2007-2010, and is Co-Founder and Director of the Data and Democracy Initiative of the Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society.[18]
For his research, Goldberg was awarded the National Science Foundation Young Investigator Award in 1994, the National Science Foundation Presidential Faculty Fellowship in 1995, the Joseph F. Engelberger Robotics Award in 2000, the IEEE Major Educational Innovation Award in 2001. Goldberg was named IEEE Fellow in 2005 "for contributions to networked telerobotics and geometric algorithms for automation."
Artwork
In the field of collaborative filtering, Goldberg developed Eigentaste, a constant-time recommendation algorithm. It is featured in his online project, Jester, which is an online personalized joke recommender system.[19] Goldberg's work in filtering algorithms has also extended to social media and foreign policy. His project, Opinion Space, is a data visualization which enables organization and analysis of constructive suggestions, using an intuitive graphical map of ideas.[20] This platform is currently utilized for collective idea discovery by the U.S. Department of State, and corporations such as Unilever and GM.
Goldberg is Founding Director of UC Berkeley's Art, Technology, and Culture Lecture Series, established in 1997.[21] This monthly speaker series brings artists, writers, and curators such as Laurie Anderson, Miranda July, Billy Klüver, David Byrne and Bruno Latour to give evening lectures and is free and open to the public.
Goldberg is editor of several books, including The Robot in the Garden: Telerobotics and Telepistemology in the Age of the Internet (MIT Press, 2000), and Beyond Webcams: An Introduction to Online Robotics (MIT Press, 2001), which both explore what is knowable at a distance.
As an artist, Goldberg's work has been exhibited at the Whitney Biennial, Venice Biennale, Catharine Clark Gallery,[22] Pompidou Centre (Paris), Walker Art Center, Ars Electronica (Linz Austria), Electronic Language International Festival (São Paulo), ZKM (Karlsruhe), ICC Biennale (Tokyo), Kwangju Biennale (Seoul), Artists Space, and The Kitchen (New York). He has held visiting positions at San Francisco Art Institute, MIT Media Lab, and the Art Center College of Design.[23]
The Tribe, a short film he co-wrote with his wife, Tiffany Shlain (who directed and produced the film) was selected for the 2006 Sundance Film Festival and the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival.[24] Their second film collaboration, Connected: An Autoblogography about Love, Death, and Technology, is a documentary feature film selected for the 2011 Sundance Film Festival.[25]
Goldberg's Ballet Mori project, performed by the San Francisco Ballet, won an Izzie award at the Isadora Duncan Dance Awards in 2007. [26] Goldberg collaborated with Gil Gershoni on Are We There Yet?, a solo acoustic art installation commissioned by the Creative Work Fund and exhibited in 2011 at the Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco.[27] Goldberg collaborated with Martin M. Wattenberg and Fernanda Viégas on the visual installation Bloom that is in the permanent collection of the Nevada Museum of Art.[28][29]
References
- ↑ Craigslist donates $1.6M for faculty chair at Cal
- ↑ UC Berkeley IEOR Dept. - Faculty Page
- ↑ UC Berkeley EECS Dept. - Faculty Page
- ↑ UC Berkeley School of Information - Faculty Page
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Remote Control - East Bay Express Web-piloted humans, telegardens, robots that paint -- it's all in a half-day's work for Cal engineering whiz and conceptual artist Ken Goldberg.
- ↑ Carnegie Mellon University, Computer Science - Alumni Snapshot: Ken Goldberg
- ↑ Ken Goldberg and Co-Authors Online Publications
- ↑ UC Berkeley Laboratory for Automation Science and Engineering
- ↑ Putting the Turing into Manufacturing: Recent Developments in Algorithmic Automation. Ken Goldberg. Invited Keynote: Extended Abstract. ACM Symposium on Computational Geometry (SoCG). Rio de Janiero, Brazil. June 2013.
- ↑ ACM Digital Library - Stochastic plans for robotic manipulation
- ↑ Editorial Board - 'IEEE Robotics and Automation Society'
- ↑ List of Patents - Ken Goldberg
- ↑ Ken Goldberg: 4 lessons from robots about being human | Video on TED.com
- ↑ UC Berkeley - The Telegarden Website
- ↑ Collaborative Online Teleoperation with Spatial Dynamic Voting and a Human Tele-Actor K. Goldberg, D. Song, Y. Khor, D. Pescovitz, A. Levandowski, J. Himmelstein, J. Shih, A. Ho, E. Paulos, J. Donath, IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, May 2002.
- ↑ Founders - African Robotics Network (AFRON)
- ↑ The African Robotics Network (AFRON) – Tribeca Disruptive Innovation Awards
- ↑ CITRIS - Ken Goldberg appointed Faculty Director of the CITRIS Data and Democracy Initiative
- ↑ Eigentaste: A Constant Time Collaborative Filtering Algorithm, Ken Goldberg, Theresa Roeder, Dhruv Gupta, and Chris Perkins, Information Retrieval Journal,4(2), pp. 133-151. July 2001.
- ↑ Opinion Space: A Scalable Tool for Browsing Online Comments. Siamak Faridani, Ephrat Bitton, Kimiko Ryokai, Ken Goldberg. ACM International Conference on Computer Human Interaction (CHI). Atlanta, GA. April 2010.
- ↑ UC Berkeley Art, Technology, and Culture Colloquium
- ↑ "Ken Goldberg". Catharine Clark Gallery. Retrieved 17 January 2014.
- ↑ Ken Goldberg, Artist Bio
- ↑ The Tribe the Film (2005)
- ↑ Connected the Film | An Autoblogography about Love, Death & Technology (2011)
- ↑ Outstanding Achievement in Music / Sound / Text - Isadora Duncan Dance Awards
- ↑ Are We There Yet? - Contemporary Jewish Museum - Art, People, and Ideas, San Francisco, CA
- ↑ Making Art Out of Earthquakes Berkeley's Ken Goldberg explores how to help people understand the physical realities of a geologically active world.
- ↑ BLOOM: Ken Goldberg, Sanjay Krishnan, Fernanda Viégas, and Martin Wattenberg | Nevada Museum of Art
Additional reading
- Baumgärtel, Tilman (2001). net.art 2.0 - New Materials towards Net art. Nürnberg: Verlag für Moderne Kunst Nürnberg. pp. 88–95. ISBN 3-933096-66-9.
External links
- Ken Goldberg's UC Berkeley homepage
- art Ken Goldberg's Artwork
- Berkeley Automation Lab homepage
- Goldberg's publications
- IEEE Transactions on Automation Science and Engineering
- TeleGarden
- Art, Technology, and Culture Colloquium
- The Robot in the Garden (MIT Press)
- Thomas Dreher: Telepresence - Eduardo Kac and Ken Goldberg (in German)