CS Distinguished Lecture Series: “Automatic Annotation of Protein Function”
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
11:00am
Research Hall, Room 163
Lydia Kavraki
Speaker's Bio
Lydia E. Kavraki is the Noah Harding
Professor of Computer Science and Bioengineering at Rice
University. She also holds an appointment at the Department of
Structural and Computational Biology and Molecular Biophysics at
the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. Kavraki received her
B.A. in Computer Science from the University of Crete in Greece
and her Ph.D. in Computer Science from Stanford University
working with Jean-Claude Latombe. Her research contributions are
in physical algorithms and their applications in robotics (robot
motion planning, hybrid systems, formal methods in robotics,
assembly planning, micromanipulation, and flexible object
manipulation), as well as in computational structural biology,
translational bioinformatics, and biomedical informatics
(modeling of proteins and biomolecular interactions, large-scale
functional annotation of proteins, computer-assisted drug
design, and systems biology). Kavraki has authored more than 180
peer-reviewed journal and conference publications and is one of
the authors of a robotics textbook titled "Principles of Robot
Motion" published by MIT Press. She is heavily involved in the
development of The Open Motion Planning Library (OMPL), which is
used in industry and in academic research in robotics and
bioinformatics. Kavraki is currently on the editorial board of
the International Journal of Robotics Research, the ACM/IEEE
Transactions on Computational Biology and Bioinformatics, the
Computer Science Review, and Big Data. She is also a member of
the editorial advisory board of the Springer Tracts in Advanced
Robotics. Kavraki is the recipient of the Association for
Computing Machinery (ACM) Grace Murray Hopper Award for her
technical contributions. She has also received an NSF CAREER
award, a Sloan Fellowship, the Early Academic Career Award from
the IEEE Society on Robotics and Automation, a recognition as a
top young investigator from the MIT Technology Review Magazine,
and the Duncan Award for excellence in research and teaching
from Rice University. Kavraki is a Fellow of the Association of
Computing Machinery (ACM), a Fellow of the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), a Fellow of the
Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence
(AAAI), a Fellow of the American Institute for Medical and
Biological Engineering (AIMBE), a Fellow of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), and a Fellow
of the World Technology Network (WTN). Kavraki was elected a
member of the Institute of Medicine (IOM) of the National
Academies in 2012. She is also a member of the Academy of
Medicine, Engineering and Science of Texas (TAMEST) since 2012.
Current projects at Kavraki's laboratory are described under http://www.kavrakilab.org
and http://www.cs.rice.edu/~kavraki.