Carnegie Mellon University
June 08, 2021

Five CMU Faculty Selected for Amazon Research Awards

By Aaron Aupperlee

Aaron Aupperlee
  • School of Computer Science
  • 412-268-9068

Amazon selected five Carnegie Mellon University faculty members to receive funding in its latest round of Amazon Research Awards.

Katerina Fragkiadaki, Ruben Martins and Heather Miller from the School of Computer Science; and Sivaraman Balakrishnan and David Danks in the Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences received fellowships.

The awards provide funding, access to Amazon public datasets, and the use of artificial intelligence and machine learning services and tools. Each award is intended to support one year of work for one to two graduate students or postdoctoral students with faculty supervision. Amazon provided 101 awards to recipients from 59 universities.

"The 2020 Amazon Research Awards recipients represent a distinguished array of academic researchers who are pursuing research across areas such as machine learning algorithms and theory, fairness in AI, computer vision, natural language processing, edge computing and medical research," said Bratin Saha, vice president of Amazon Web Services' Machine Learning Services. "We are excited by the depth and breadth of their proposals, as well as the opportunity to advance the science through strengthened connections among academic researchers, their institutions and our research teams."

Balakrishnan, an assistant professor of statistics, will use the award to continue work on developing robust learning algorithms. The push to quickly collect and label data and to rapidly train, evaluate and deploy models all with minimal human intervention has led to concerns that datasets are fraught with quality issues and that test data derived from the real world won't have the same distribution as training data.
Sivaraman Balakrishnan
Sivaraman Balakrishnan
Research by Danks, the L.L. Thurstone Professor of Philosophy and Psychology, will evaluate the impact of data-driven algorithms making decisions that ultimately affect people. The project will develop a framework for understanding, evaluating and regulating algorithm-assisted decision making for situations where the outcome determined by the algorithm shouldn't be a decision but rather a predictive recommendation provided to humans, who will ultimately make the decisions.
David Danks
David Danks
Fragkiadaki, an assistant professor in the Machine Learning Department, received an award to support her group's ongoing work on intelligent manipulation in conjunction with Robotics Institute faculty member Chris Atkeson. Their research will focus on helping artificial agents quickly adapt to new environments through continual learning from a library of reusable behaviors. This library will help AI agents generalize manipulation skills across different objects, their configurations, scene clutter and camera viewpoints.
Katerina Fragkiadaki
Katerina Fragkiadaki
Martins, a systems scientist in the Computer Science Department who will start as an assistant research professor in July, will use his award to study optimization problems where the variables, like the number of students and courses at CMU, put ideal solutions out of the reach of existing algorithms. Instead, Martins will look to solve these problems efficiently but not perfectly to save money, human resources and computation time.
Ruben Martins
Ruben Martins
Miller, an assistant professor in the Institute for Software Research, received an award for work with her Ph.D. candidate, Christopher Meiklejohn, on a project called Filibuster. The tool systematically identifies bugs in applications like Netflix or Audible before they can reach production and potentially bring down large web services.
Heather Miller
Heather Miller

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