Ken Goldberg
Professor, UC Berkeley
Ken Goldberg is an artist and professor at UC Berkeley. He is
Director of the Berkeley Center for New Media, and Professor of
Industrial Engineering and Operations Research, with secondary
appointments in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and in the
School of Information.
Goldberg received his PhD in Computer Science from CMU in 1990 and
studied at the University of Pennsylvania, Edinburgh University, and
the Technion. From 1991-95 he taught at the University of Southern
California, and in Fall 2000 was visiting faculty at MIT Media Lab.
Goldberg and his students work in two areas: Geometric Algorithms for
Automation, and Networked Robots. In the first category, he develops
algorithms for feeding, sorting, and fixturing industrial parts, with
an emphasis on mathematically rigorous solutions that require a
minimum of sensing and actuation so as to reduce costs and increase
reliability. In the area of Networked Robots, Goldberg and colleagues
developed the first robot publically operable via the Internet (in
1994). He has published over 100 research papers and edited four
books.
In 2004, Goldberg co-founded the IEEE Transactions on Automation
Science and Engineering and is Founding Chair of its Advisory Board.
Goldberg was named National Science Foundation Young Investigator in
1994 and NSF/Whitehouse Presidential Faculty Fellow in 1995. He is
the recipient of the Joseph Engelberger Award (2000), the IEEE Major
Educational Innovation Award (2001) and was elected IEEE Fellow in
2005.
Goldberg lives in Mill Valley with his daughter and wife,
filmmaker and Webby Awards founder Tiffany Shlain.
More information on Goldberg's research and teaching: http://goldberg.berkeley.edu
More information on Goldberg's artwork: http://www.ken.goldberg.net
goldberg@berkeley.edu