Matt Sanders

Matt Sanders headshot
msanders@gatech.edu

Matt works with Georgia Tech researchers and students, along with industry partners in the creation of innovative mobile and converged applications and services. He is also the Associate Director, and co-founder, of the Georgia Tech Research Network Operations Center, a unique research center supporting industry and student engagement through research and operational projects; and the wireless services manager for Georgia Tech in the Office of Information Technology. Matt is a principal in the annual Convergence Innovation Competition, now in its ninth year, which provides industry sponsors an opportunity to engage students in wide ranging categories which they define and judge. Matt is also responsible for The GT Journey project which includes GT mobile, an HTML5 based portal for mobile, desktop, and kiosks; and GT DevHub where any member of the campus community can access campus IT services and contribute content, meta-data, and the applications themselves.

Director of Research Computing and Data, Georgia Tech
Senior Research Scientist
Phone
(404) 894-9107
Additional Research

Mobile Applications

IRI/Group and Role
People and Technology > Affiliated Faculty
People and Technology
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology

Agata Rozga

Agata Rozga's profile picture
agata@gatech.edu

Agata Rozga is a psychologist with expertise and 16 years of experience forging a new interdisciplinary research area at the intersection of computing and psychology called computational behavioral science. The research vision is to transform the measurement and understanding of long-term, health-related behavioral trends by leveraging advances in sensing, wearable and mobile technologies, and computational analysis methods. The goal is to develop tools that can lead to better detection and monitoring of health-related trends in everyday settings. 

One thrust of Dr. Rozga’s research has focused on understanding early trajectories and predictors of social communication in children diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder. In her most recent work, she is applying novel computational analysis methods to longitudinal measures of communication to identify different pathways to language in autism, including failure to acquire spoken language by age 5. 

Dr. Rozga’s research has recently expanded to include a thrust focused on Aging and Mild Cognitive Impairment, with an eye toward developing novel, AI-based systems to monitor cognitive and functional decline during everyday activities. A related thrust focuses on developing and evaluating situated AI-based interactive supports to help older adults maintain independence and quality of life 

Dr. Rozga serves as the Director of Translational Research for the Georgia Tech-led NSF National AI Institute for Collaborative Assistance and Responsive Interaction for Networked Groups (AI-CARING). She previously served as Programs and Research Director for the Technology Core of the Cognitive Empowerment Program at the Emory Brain-Health Center, and as Head of Product for Diligent Robotics

Principal Research Scientist
Phone
404-894-2304
Research Affiliations
School of Interactive Computing, AI-CARING, IPaT
Additional Research

HCI; computational behavior science; AI & health; autism; aging

IRI/Group and Role
Data Engineering and Science > Faculty
People and Technology > Affiliated Faculty
Data Engineering and Science
People and Technology
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology > College of Computing > School of Interactive Computing

LaShonda Rosier

LaShonda Rosier's profile picture
lrosier3@gatech.edu

LaShonda Rosier has over 20 years of administrative experience. She gained most of her experience working for local county and city government. She is a graduate of Savannah State University with a bachelor of business administration (management) and master of business administration (MBA) from Brenau University. She serves as the program and operations manager for the CEAR Hub.

CEAR Program and Operations Manager
IRI/Group and Role
People and Technology > Staff
People and Technology

Christine Robinson

Christine Robinson's profile picture
crobinson323@gatech.edu

Christine Robinson comes to IPaT with over 20 years of executive administrative experience. As a former USG employee, she worked at Georgia State University in the Andrew Young School for Policy Studies Dean’s Office as the administrative specialist. She also served as one of the former Directors of The Non-Profit Leadership Alliance at Georgia State. Christine relocated to Atlanta from Charlotte, NC and enjoys writing poetry and creating custom candles. Christine joined IPaT’s administrative team to assist with the day-to-day operations of the unit, direct support of unit management including coordinating calendars, meetings and assisting with events and procurement.

Executive Assistant
Phone
404-894-4728
IRI/Group and Role
People and Technology > Staff
People and Technology

Walter Rich

Walter Rich's profile picture
walter.rich@research.gatech.edu

Walter Rich is a research communications program manager in Georgia Tech's Institute Communications supporting the Institute for People and Technology and Georgia Tech research communications.

Research Communications Program Manager
Phone
404.894.5901
IRI/Group and Role
People and Technology > Leadership
People and Technology > Staff
People and Technology

Mark Riedl

Mark Riedl's profile picture
riedl@cc.gatech.edu

Mark Riedl is a professor in the Georgia Tech School of Interactive Computing and director of the Entertainment Intelligence Lab. Mark's research focuses on the intersection of artificial intelligence, virtual worlds, and storytelling. The principle research question Mark addresses through his research is: how can intelligent computational systems reason about and autonomously create engaging experiences for users of virtual worlds and computer games. Mark's primary research contributions are in the area of artificial intelligence approaches to automated story generation and interactive storytelling for entertainment, education, and training. Narrative is a cognitive tool used by humans for communication and sense-making. The goal of my narrative intelligence research is to discover new computational algorithms and models that can facilitate the development of intelligent computer systems that can reason about narrative in order to be better communicators, entertainers, and educators. Additionally, Mark has explored the following research topics: virtual cinematography in 3D virtual worlds; player modeling; procedural generation of computer game content; computational creativity; human creativity support; intelligent virtual characters; mixed-initiative problem solving; and discourse generation. Mark earned a Ph.D. degree in 2004 from North Carolina State University. From 2004-2007, Mark was a Research Scientist at the University of Southern California Institute for Creative Technologies where he researched and developed interactive, narrative-based training systems. Mark joined the Georgia Tech College of Computing in 2007 where he continues to study artificial intelligence approaches to story generation, interactive narratives, and adaptive computer games. His research is supported by the NSF, DARPA, the U.S. Army, Google, and Disney. Mark was the recipient of a DARPA Young Faculty Award and an NSF CAREER Award.

Gitesh Ramamurthy Endowed Professor of AI
Director; Entertainment Intelligence Lab
Phone
404.385.2860
Office
CODA S1123
Additional Research

Artificial intelligence; Machine Learning; Storytelling; Game AI; Computer Games; Computational Creativity

IRI/Group and Role
People and Technology > Affiliated Faculty
Robotics > Affiliated Faculty
People and Technology
Robotics
Space > Faculty
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology > College of Computing > School of Interactive Computing
Research Areas
Artificial Intelligence
Space

James Rehg

James Rehg's profile picture
james.rehg@cc.gatech.edu

Dr. Rehg's research interests include computer vision, computer graphics, machine learning, robotics, and distributed computing. He co-directs the Computational Perception Laboratory (CPL) and is affiliated with the GVU Center, Aware Home Research Institute, and the Center for Experimental Research in Computer Science. In past years he has taught "Computer Vision" (CS 4495/7495) and "Introduction to Probabilistic Graphical Models" (CS 8803). He is currently teaching "Pattern Recognition" (CS 4803) and "Computer Graphics" (CS 4451). Dr. Rehg received the 2005 Raytheon Faculty Fellowship Award from the College of Computing. His paper with Ph.D. student Yushi Jing and collaborator Vladimir Pavlovic was the recipient of a Distinguished Student Paper Award at the 2005 International Conference on Machine Learning. Dr. Rehg currently serves on the Editorial Board of the International Journal of Computer Vision. He was the Short Courses Chair for the International Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV) in 2005 and the Workshops Chair for ICCV 2003. Dr. Rehg consults for several companies and has served as an expert witness. His research is funded by the NSF, DARPA, Intel Research, Microsoft Research, and the Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories.

Note: Rehg recently moved to the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign as the Founder Professor of Computer Science and Industrial and Enterprise Systems Engineering.

Adjunct Professor; School of Interactive Computing
Phone
404.894.9105
Office
TSRB 221A
Additional Research

Computer Vision; Computer Graphics; Machine Learning; Robotics; and Distributed Computing

IRI/Group and Role
People and Technology > Affiliated Faculty
Robotics > Core Faculty
Data Engineering and Science
People and Technology
Robotics
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology > College of Computing > School of Interactive Computing
Research Areas
Artificial Intelligence

Arthi Rao

Arthi Rao's profile picture
arthir@gatech.edu

Arthi Rao is a research scientist at the Center for Quality Growth and Regional Development at Georgia Tech. She has had a consistent focus on Health and Place research throughout her career. She has an interdisciplinary educational and professional background in Urban Planning, Epidemiology and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) from Georgia Tech. Her research interests focus on social determinants of health, healthcare access, healthy communities, and spatial methods. She uses methods including spatial clustering, data mining/classification techniques and hierarchical modeling in her research. She has integrated these methods to create decision-support tools for academic and industrial applications.

She regularly collaborates with researchers at The Morehouse School of Medicine, Georgia Tech, and the American Planning Association as a subject matter expert on healthy communities’ research and geospatial methods. She has published in journals on the topics of Health Impact Assessment (HIA), sustainability, walkability analysis, regional planning, and therapeutic landscapes. She also teaches courses titled “Public Health and the Built Environment” and “Public Health Analytics” at Georgia Tech.

Specialization Area: Health and Environment

Part-Time Lecturer, School of City & Regional Planning
Research Scientist II, Center for Quality Growth and Regional Development
IRI/Group and Role
People and Technology > Affiliated Faculty
People and Technology
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology > College of Design
Research Areas
Artificial Intelligence

Kishore Ramachandran

Kishore Ramachandran's profile picture
rama@gatech.edu
Professor
Phone
404-894-5236
Additional Research
Parallel and Distributed Systems
IRI/Group and Role
People and Technology > Affiliated Faculty
People and Technology
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology > College of Computing

Peter Presti

Peter Presti's profile picture
peter.presti@imtc.gatech.edu

Peter Presti is a principal research scientist at the Georgia Institute of Technology. During his 22 years with the university he has collaborated with companies such as IBM, Humana, Google, Microsoft, Intel, Alcatel-Lucent, Bellsouth, Denon Nippon-Columbia, and others. Government research sponsors have included DARPA, NIH, NSF, DoE, USDA, and the VA. His areas of research include sensor systems and biometrics, wearable computers, signal processing, pattern recognition, embedded systems, electronics design, data visualization and computer graphics, and computational geometry. His background spanning both custom hardware and software development provides him the skills to design and build fully integrated prototype systems, and in past projects has designed and built high-speed data capture systems, a variety of kinetic sensors, biometric sensors, and wearable computer systems.

Principal Research Scientist
Additional Research

Sensor Systems and Biometrics; Wearable Computers; Signal Processing; Pattern Recognition; Embedded Systems; Electronics Design; Data Visualization and Computer Graphics; and Computational Geometry

IRI/Group and Role
People and Technology > Affiliated Faculty
People and Technology > Research Faculty
People and Technology
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology
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