Dr. Matthias Scheutz
The New York Times article The Art of Building a Robot to Love said
Marvin the robot, a supporting player in “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy”, speaks in the dull monotone of the chronically depressed. In the “Star Wars” films, C-3PO is a bundle of anxiety and neuroses. And in “2001: A Space Odyssey”, the HAL 9000 is creepily homicidal.
These are all fictional machines, far removed from real robots of the present or even those that scientists envision for the future. Yet they raise questions: If robots can act in lots of ways, how do people want them to act?…
“If robots are to interact with us”, said Matthias Scheutz, director of the artificial intelligence laboratory at Notre Dame, “then the robot should be such so that people can make its behavior predictive”. That is, people should be able to understand how and why the robot acts.
Dr. Matthias
Scheutz is
Director of the Artificial Intelligence and Robotics Laboratory
at the
University of Notre Dame.
Matthias is
investigating the utility of affective states for the control of
agent
behavior, the extent to which simple affective control states can be and
will evolve, and the condition under which affect ceases to be beneficial
(e.g., compared to non-affective, deliberative control) and
is also investigating the
mechanisms underlying the organization
and processing of a second language in humans using
neural networks.
Read his full list of research projects!
He edited
Computationalism: New Directions and
coauthored
ADE – An Architecture Development Environment for Virtual and Robotic
Agents in
International Journal of Artificial Intelligence Tools,
Many is More: The Utility
of Simple Reactive Agents with Predictive Mechanisms in Multiagent Object
Collection Tasks in
Web Intelligence and Agent Systems,
A
Real-time Robotic Model of Human Reference Resolution using Visual
Constraints in
Connection Science, and
Effects of
Morphosyntactic Gender Features in Bilingual Language Processing
in
Cognitive Science.
Read his full list
of publications!
Matthias earned a Ph.D. in Philosophy from the
University of Vienna in 1995 and
a Joint Ph.D. in Cognitive Science and Computer Science from the
Indiana University Bloomington in 1999.