Suggestions
Jeffrey P. Bigham
Director of Human-Centered Machine Intelligence at Apple; Associate Professor of HCII and LTI at CMU
Jeffrey P. Bigham is a prominent figure in the field of computer science, specializing in human-computer interaction and accessibility technologies. Here are some key details about his professional background and role at Community Forge:
Academic Career
Jeffrey Bigham is currently an Associate Professor at Carnegie Mellon University's School of Computer Science, specifically in the Human-Computer Interaction Institute and Language Technologies Institute.1 He has held this position since September 2013.1 Prior to this, he was an Assistant Professor at the University of Rochester from July 2009 to August 2013.1
Industry Experience
Bigham has extensive experience working with major tech companies:
- He currently serves as the Human-Centered Machine Intelligence Lead at Apple, a position he has held since July 2018.1
- He has been a Visiting Researcher at Google, Microsoft, and MIT at various points in his career.1
Education
- Ph.D. in Computer Science and Engineering from the University of Washington (2003-2009)1
- B.S.E. in Computer Science from Princeton University (1999-2003)1
Community Forge Involvement
Jeffrey Bigham has been serving as a Board Member for Community Forge since May 2019.13 Community Forge is an organization based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, that focuses on community development and social initiatives.
Research Focus
His research interests include:
- Human-computer interaction
- Accessibility technologies
- Human-AI interaction
- Dialog systems
- Natural language processing
- Crowdsourcing4
Jeffrey Bigham is known for his work in creating innovative systems that combine computation and human input to solve complex problems, particularly in the realm of accessibility for people with disabilities.2
Highlights
the right's enwokening is way dumber than the left's. triggered by DEI, chanting how they want to defund medical research, no vaccines at all. at least the left mostly kept their moderates in charge.
the head of the FAA did in fact resign on Jan 20th in response to Elon's pressure… obv not direct line between that and last night's disaster, but do we really think it's good to have important agencies like the FAA dealing with chaos instead of well-managed reform? i don't.