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M Bernardine Dias
Research Scientist
Associated center: FRC
Email address: bdias@andrew.cmu.edu
Mailing address:
Carnegie Mellon University
Robotics Institute
5000 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213
For more information, see my personal homepage.
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Research interests |
Keywords |
Additional Interests and Responsibilities |
Labs & groups |
Projects |
Publications
My principal research objective is to define and advance the science of technology for developing communities (TFDC); that is, technology relevant to communities where monetary resources are scarce, and the accessible infrastructure and indigenous skills are very different from the norms prevalent in the technologically developed world. My goal is to build technology that empowers these underserved communities in a manner that is culturally relevant and locally sustainable. To this end, I founded TechBridgeWorld (www.techbridgeworld.org) at Carnegie Mellon University to provide the necessary infrastructure for collaborative work between the university and underserved communities around the world. TechBridgeWorld extends the benefits of technology to developing communities, thus promoting a novel field of research that uniquely enhances the world we live in.
A second important research goal is to advance the state of the art in autonomous team coordination. Much of my work to date with team coordination deals with market-based systems where team members conduct and participate in auctions to allocate tasks and resources. My dissertation work laid the foundation for the TraderBots coordination framework that is now a licensed tool used by several groups for research and development in team coordination. My goal for autonomous team coordination is to advance the understanding and the science of market-based coordination mechanisms. I am primarily interested in applications of team coordination in uncertain and dynamic conditions, and in enabling robust, intelligent, and effective coordination of limited resources under these conditions using market-based approaches. An important aspect of this work is to understand and enable effective human-robot teams engaged in complex tasks. My work in team coordination is relevant to TFDC applications such as disaster relief and some of this work is evolving to explicitly address needs in disaster response.
| Research interest keywords |
artificial intelligence, education, field robotics, hazardous environments, human-computer interaction, mobile robots, motion planning, multi-agent systems, planning, space robotics, and technology for developing communities
| Additional Interests and Responsibilities |
Teaching and research at the Carnegie Mellon University, Qatar campus
Founding member and graduate faculty advisor for women@SCS
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TechBridgeWorld - TechBridgeWorld innovates and implements technology solutions to meet sustainable development needs around the world.
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Treasure Hunt: Pickup Teams - We are developing a single heterogeneous human-robot team capable of effectively locating objects of interest (treasure) spread over a complex, previously unknown environment.
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- Sliding Autonomy for Peer-To-Peer Human-Robot Teams
M.B. Dias, B. Kannan, B. Browning, E. Jones, B. Argall, M.F. Dias, M.B. Zinck, M. Veloso, and A. Stentz
tech. report CMU-RI-TR-08-16, Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, April, 2008.
[Abstract]
Download: pdf [2926 KB] copyrighted
- Iterative Design of A Braille Writing Tutor to Combat Illiteracy
N. Kalra, T. Lauwers, D. Dewey, T. Stepleton, and M.B. Dias
Proceedings of the 2nd IEEE/ACM International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development, December, 2007.
[Abstract]
Download: pdf [1875 KB] copyrighted
- The Dynamic Hungarian Algorithm for the Assignment Problem with Changing Costs
G.A. Mills-Tettey, A. Stentz, and M.B. Dias
tech. report CMU-RI-TR-07-27, Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, July, 2007.
[Abstract]
Download: pdf [139 KB] copyrighted
- DD* Lite: Efficient Incremental Search with State Dominance
G.A. Mills-Tettey, A. Stentz, and M.B. Dias
tech. report CMU-RI-TR-07-12, Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, May, 2007.
[Abstract]
Download: pdf [271 KB] copyrighted
- Undergraduate Robotics Education in Technologically Underserved Communities
M.B. Dias, B. Browning, G.A. Mills-Tettey, N. Amanquah, and N. El-Moughny
2007 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, April, 2007, pp. 1387-1392.
[Abstract]
Download: pdf [384 KB] copyrighted
- A Braille Writing Tutor to Combat Illiteracy in Developing Communities
N. Kalra, T. Lauwers, and M.B. Dias
AI in ICT for Development Workshop, International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence, January, 2007.
[Abstract]
Download: pdf [1074 KB] copyrighted
- Creating Low-Cost Soil Maps for Tropical Agriculture using Gaussian Processes
J.P. Gonzalez, S. Cook, T. Oberthur, A. Jarvis, J. Bagnell, and M.B. Dias
Workshop on AI in ICT for Development (ICTD) at the Twentieth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI 2007), January, 2007.
[Abstract]
Download: pdf [856 KB] copyrighted
- Teaching technical creativity through Robotics: A case study in Ghana
G.A. Mills-Tettey, M.B. Dias, B. Browning, and N. Amanquah
Workshop on AI in ICT for Development (ICTD) at the Twentieth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI 2007), January, 2007.
[Abstract]
Download: pdf [392 KB] copyrighted
- Learning-enhanced Market-based Task Allocation for Disaster Response
E. Jones, M.B. Dias, and A. Stentz
tech. report CMU-RI-TR-06-48, Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, October, 2006.
[Abstract]
Download: pdf [242 KB] copyrighted
- Teaching technical creativity through Robotics: A case study in Ghana
G.A. Mills-Tettey, M.B. Dias, B. Browning, and N. Amanquah
tech. report CMU-RI-TR-06-46, Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, October, 2006.
[Abstract]
Download: pdf [155 KB] copyrighted
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