President's Lecture Series

President's Lecture Series

Published:
Wednesday, February 20, 2013 - 14:34
SUNY Poly News Logo



Please join us on 8 March 2013 from noon-2p in the Student Center Multi-Purpose Room, to hear Dr. Michael A. Gennert present his lecture in the President's Lecture Series entitled "Robotics Engineering at WPI".(Refreshments will be served.)


Abstract: "In 2007 Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) launched a degree program in Robotics Engineering to educate young men and women in robotics.  At that time, there were only a handful of universities in Asia, Europe, and Oceania offering undergraduate Robotics programs, although many universities in the United States and elsewhere included robotics within a discipline such as Computer Science, Electrical Engineering, or Mechanical Engineering. We took a decidedly different approach, introducing Robotics Engineering as a multi-disciplinary engineering discipline to meet the needs for a new kind of engineering.  The curriculum, designed top-down, incorporates a number of best practices, including spiral curriculum, a unified set of core courses, multiple pathways, inclusion of social issues and entrepreneurship, emphasis on project-based learning, and capstone design projects. This talk provides a brief synopsis and multi-year retrospective on the program, including lessons learned as an educational entrepreneur. The talk will also survey some of the robotics research underway at WPI, such as biomedical robots, human-robot interaction, various modalities (ground, air, water, ice, trees), robot learning, and combined sensing and manipulation."


Professor Michael A. Gennert "is Director of the Robotics Engineering Program at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, where he is Professor of Computer Science and Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering.  He has worked at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center, Worcester, MA, the University of California/Riverside, General Electric Ordnance Systems, Pittsfield, MA and PAR Technology Corporation, New Hartford, NY.  He received the S.B. in Computer Science, S.B. in Electrical Engineering, and S.M. in Electrical Engineering in 1980 and the Sc.D. in Electrical Engineering in 1987 from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  Dr. Gennert is interested in Computer Vision, Image Processing, Scientific Databases, and Programming Languages, with ongoing projects in biomedical image processing, robotics, and stereo and motion vision.  He is author or co-author of over 100 papers.  He is a member of Sigma Xi, NDIA Robotics Division, and the Massachusetts Technology Leadership Council Robotics Cluster, and a senior member of IEEE and ACM."


Other
News