Invited Speakers

We are delighted to feature the following awesome speakers organized into six panels

Jane Wang

Jane Wang
Affiliation DeepMind
Biography Jane Wang is a research scientist at DeepMind on the neuroscience team, working on meta-reinforcement learning and neuroscience-inspired artificial agents. Her background is in physics, complex systems, and computational and cognitive neuroscience.

Eric Traut

Eric Traut
Affiliation Microsoft
Biography Eric Traut is an American software engineer and software emulation pioneer. Traut graduated from Stanford University in 1992. From 1993 to 1995 he worked for Apple Computer, creating a Mac 68K emulator to be used in PowerPC-based Macintoshes.His work on this project led to a patent on a form of dynamic recompilation. Traut went on to join Connectix, where he developed successful commercial emulators such as Virtual PC and Virtual Game Station. He became Connectix’s Chief Technical Officer in 2001. Traut became a Microsoft employee after the company purchased Connectix in 2003. Traut left Microsoft in late 2012. Traut rejoined Microsoft in May 2014 and is now a Technical Fellow.

Sujeeth Bharadwaj

Sujeeth Bharadwaj
Affiliation Microsoft
Biography Sujeeth Bharadwaj leads machine learning research and development in resource-optimized deep learning, computer vision, and NLP. He is especially passionate about healthcare/medical imaging applications where efficient algorithms are critical – given gigabyte-sized input data (e.g. 3D CT/MRI) and growing model complexity. Most recently, he developed SONIC (small, optimized network using independent computations, with fewer than 4.3M parameters) to detect chest infections from x-rays. He was featured in Intelligent Health’s Top-50 Innovators 2020 for this work.

Gabriel Sliva

Gabriel A Sliva
Affiliation University of California, San Diego
Biography Dr. Gabriel A. Silva is a Professor in the Department of Bioengineering and the Department of Neurosciences at the University of California San Diego. He holds a Jacobs Family Scholar in Engineering Endowed Chair, is the Founding Director of the Center for Engineered Natural Intelligence, and Associate Director of the Kavli Institute for Brain and Mind. He is an affiliated faculty member in the Department of NanoEngineering, and a faculty member in the BioCircuits Institute, the Neurosciences Graduate Program, Computational Neurobiology Program, and Institute for Neural Computation. Previously, Silva served as Vice Chair of the Department of Bioengineering, and was Co-Director of the Retinal Engineering Center in the Institute of Engineering in Medicine. As an Associate Professor he held the Jacobs Faculty Fellows Professor of Bioengineering.

Susan Athey

Susan Athey
Affiliation Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence
Biography Susan Athey is the Economics of Technology Professor at Stanford Graduate School of Business. She received her bachelor’s degree from Duke University and her PhD from Stanford, and she holds an honorary doctorate from Duke University. She is the Associate Director at the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence.

Konrad Kording

Konrad Kording
Affiliation University of Pennsylvania
Biography Konrad Kording is a professor of Neuroscience at the Perelman School of Medicine. Dr. Kording’s research has one single focus: data that matters. Early research in the lab focused on computational neuroscience and movement. But as the approaches matured, the focus has been on discovering ways in which new data sources and emerging data analysis can enable awesome possibilities. His lab current focuses on causality in data science applications.

Amit Sharma

Amit Sharma
Affiliation Microsoft Research
Biography Amit Sharma is a researcher at Microsoft Research India. From 2015-2017, he was a postdoctoral researcher at MSR New York working with Jake Hofman and Duncan Watts. Prior to that, he completed his Ph.D. in Computer Science at Cornell University and his undergraduate at IIT Kharagpur. His work has received a Best Paper Honorable Mention Award at the 2016 ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing (CSCW), the 2012 Yahoo! Key Scientific Challenges Award and the 2009 Honda Young Engineer and Scientist Award.

Brenden Lake

Brenden Lake
Affiliation New York University / Facebook AI Research
Biography Brenden is an Assistant Professor of Psychology and Data Science at New York University, and a Research Scientist at Facebook AI Research. He received his M.S. and B.S. in Symbolic Systems from Stanford University in 2009, and his Ph.D. in Cognitive Science from MIT in 2014. He was a postdoctoral Data Science Fellow at NYU from 2014-2017. Brenden’s research focuses on computational problems that are easier for people than they are for machines, such as learning new concepts, compositional generalization, and question asking.

Judith Fan

Judith Fan
Affiliation University of California, San Diego
Biography Judith is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at UC San Diego. Her research addresses questions at the intersection of cognitive science, computational neuroscience, and AI. As a central case study, her lab’s recent investigations focus on human visual communication, which encompasses behaviors ranging from informal sketching to formal scientific visualization and its applications in education, user interface design, and assistive technologies. Her goal in building computational models of such behaviors is to understand how perception, memory, motor planning, and social cognition functionally interact in the brain, leading to a more unified understanding of how multiple cognitive systems are coordinated during complex, natural behaviors.

Kevin Ellis

Kevin Ellis
Affiliation Cornell University
Biography Kevin Ellis is a computer scientist working in artificial intelligence and program synthesis, with the goal of better combining reasoning and learning. He is an assistant professor at Cornell in computer science. Previously he was a research scientist at Common Sense Machines between starting at Cornell and completing my PhD at MIT’s Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, where he was coadvised by Josh Tenenbaum and Armando Solar-Lezama.

Celeste Kidd

Celeste Kidd
Affiliation University of California, Berkeley
Biography Celeste Kidd is a professor of psychology at the University of California, Berkeley. She was amongst the Silence Breakers who were named Time Person of the Year in 2017. She uses a blend of computational models and behavioral experiments to study the core cognitive systems that people use to guide their learning—including attention, curiosity, and metacognition.

Chelsea Finn

Chelsea Finn
Affiliation Stanford University
Biography Chelsea Finn is an Assistant Professor in Computer Science and Electrical Engineering at Stanford University. Professor Finn’s research interests lie in the ability to enable robots and other agents to develop broadly intelligent behavior through learning and interaction. Her work lies at the intersection of machine learning and robotic control, including topics such as end-to-end learning of visual perception and robotic manipulation skills, deep reinforcement learning of general skills from autonomously collected experience, and meta-learning algorithms that can enable fast learning of new concepts and behaviors.

Timothy Verstynen

Timothy Verstynen
Affiliation Carnegie Mellon University
Biography Timothy Verstynen is an Associate Professor in Psychology and the Carnegie Mellon Neuroscience Institute with a courtesy appointment in Biomedical Engineering at CMU and the Learning Research and Development Center at the University of Pittsburgh. He is also Co-Director of the CMU-Pitt Brain Imaging Data Generation & Education (BRIDGE) Center. Professor Verstynen received his Bachelors in Psychology from the University of New Mexico and Ph.D. in Psychology from the University of California, Berkeley where he studied the neural mechanisms of complex hand movements. As a postdoctoral fellow at UCSF, he explored the computational mechanisms of fast adaptive priors in visually-guided reaching, followed by a second postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Pittsburgh, developing novel diffusion imaging approaches for mapping white matter pathways.

Doug Burger

Doug Burger
Affiliation Microsoft Research / University of Texas-Austin
Biography Doug Burger is one of the world’s leading active researchers in computer architecture, with a broad set of important contributions to his credit. After receiving his PhD from University of Wisconsin in 1998, he joined UT Austin as a professor, receiving tenure in 2004 and becoming a full professor in 2008. His work on Explicit Data Graph Computing (EDGE) represents the fourth major class of instruction-set architectures (after CISC, RISC, and VLIW). At U. Texas, he co-led the project that conceived and built the TRIPS processor, an ambitious multicore ASIC and working EDGE system, which remains one of the most complex microprocessor prototypes ever built in academia.

Alysson Muotri

Alysson Muotri
Affiliation University of California, San Diego
Biography ​​Dr. Muotri is a professor at the Departments of Pediatrics and Cellular & Molecular Medicine at UC San Diego. He is also the Director of the Stem Cell Program and Archealization Center. Dr. Muotri earned a BSc in Biological Sciences from the State University of Campinas in 1995 and a Ph.D. in Genetics in 2001 from University of Sao Paulo, in Brazil. He moved to the Salk Institute as Pew Latin America Fellow in 2002 for a postdoctoral training in the fields of neuroscience and stem cell biology. His research focuses on brain evolution and modeling neurological diseases using human induced pluripotent stem cells and brain organoids. He has received several awards, including the prestigious NIH Director’s New Innovator Award, NARSAD, Emerald Foundation Young Investigator Award, Surugadai Award, Rock Star of Innovation, NIH EUREKA Award, Telly Awards among several others.

Florian Engert

Florian Engert
Affiliation Harvard University
Biography Florian Engert received his Ph.D. in physics from Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich 1997. He spent the following two years as a postdoctoral fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Neurobiology in Munich, followed by two more years as a postdoc, first at the University of California. San Diego, and then at the University of California, Berkeley. In 2002, he accepted a position as assistant professor at Harvard University, where he received tenure and was promoted to full professor in 2009. The general goal of his laboratory at present and in the intermediate future is the development of the larval zebrafish as a model system for the comprehensive identification and examination of neural circuits controlling visually induced behaviors. To that end, he established and quantified a series of visually induced behaviors and analyzed the individual resulting motor components. Using these assays, his laboratory established technology that monitors neuronal activity throughout the fish brain in an awake and intact preparation. An extended goal is the study of how changes or variations in the behavior are reflected in changes in the underlying neuronal activity.

Ralph Etienne-Cummings

Ralph Etienne-Cumming
Affiliation Johns Hopkins University
Biography Ralph Etienne-Cummings received his B.Sc. in physics in 1988. He completed his M.S.E.E (’91) and PhD (’94) in electrical engineering at the University of Pennsylvania working at the interface of microelectronics and neuroscience. Currently, Prof. Etienne-Cummings is a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Computer Science at Johns Hopkins University. He was the founding director of the Institute of Neuromorphic Engineering. He has served as Chairman of various IEEE Circuits and Systems (CAS) Technical Committees and was elected as a member of CAS Board of Governors. He also serves on numerous editorial boards in his field. He is an IEEE and AIMBE Fellow, and the recipient of the NSF’s Career, Office of Naval Research YIP, and a Fulbright Awards, among various others, which include numerous publication awards. Prof. Etienne-Cummings is an active entrepreneur in the neuroengineering space and holds numerous patents on this research.

Anima Anandkumar

Anima Anandkumar
Affiliation Caltech / NVIDIA
Biography Anima Anandkumar holds dual positions in academia and industry. She is a Bren professor at Caltech CMS department and a director of machine learning research at NVIDIA. At NVIDIA, she is leading the research group that develops next-generation AI algorithms. At Caltech, she is the co-director of Dolcit and co-leads the AI4science initiative.

Chris White

Chris White
Affiliation Microsoft
Biography Chris White is Managing Director, Special Projects. He leads mission-oriented research and software development teams focusing on high risk problems. Chris has a background in EE, with a PhD in machine learning for speech and language from Johns Hopkins. He was a Fellow at Harvard for graph statistics and machine learning before spending time in the field. He served as chief data officer for DARPA in Afghanistan, and then as country lead with oversight of all battlefield research programs. Upon return, his DARPA programs invested hundreds of millions of dollars into open source software. His work has been applied to countering human trafficking, financial fraud, and terrorism, and has received awards from the White House, Defense, and Treasury departments. In 2016 President Obama awarded him a Presidential Medal for Extraordinary Efforts to Combat Trafficking in Persons. Since coming to Microsoft Research, he’s worked in Special Projects helping build multiple disruptive technologies before becoming Managing Director.

Terry Sejnowski

Terry Sejnowski
Affiliation Salk Institute for Biological Studies
Biography Terrence Joseph Sejnowski is the Francis Crick Professor at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies where he directs the Computational Neurobiology Laboratory and is the director of the Crick-Jacobs center for theoretical and computational biology. His research in neural networks and computational neuroscience has been pioneering. Sejnowski is also Professor of Biological Sciences and adjunct professor in the departments of neurosciences, psychology, cognitive science, computer science and engineering at the University of California, San Diego, where he is co-director of the Institute for Neural Computation.

Yoshua Bengio

Yoshua Bengio
Affiliation Mila – Quebec AI Institute
Biography Recognized worldwide as one of the leading experts in artificial intelligence, Yoshua Bengio is most known for his pioneering work in deep learning, earning him the 2018 A.M. Turing Award, “the Nobel Prize of Computing,” with Geoffrey Hinton and Yann LeCun. He is a Full Professor at Université de Montréal, and the Founder and Scientific Director of Mila – Quebec AI Institute. He co-directs the CIFAR Learning in Machines & Brains program as Senior Fellow and acts as Scientific Director of IVADO.

Max Welling

Max Welling
Affiliation University of Amsterdam, Microsoft Research
Biography Prof. Dr. Max Welling is a research chair in Machine Learning at the University of Amsterdam and a Distinguished Scientist at MSR. He is a fellow at the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR) and the European Lab for Learning and Intelligent Systems (ELLIS) where he also serves on the founding board. His previous appointments include VP at Qualcomm Technologies, professor at UC Irvine, postdoc at U. Toronto and UCL under supervision of prof. Geoffrey Hinton, and postdoc at Caltech under supervision of prof. Pietro Perona. He finished his PhD in theoretical high energy physics under supervision of Nobel laureate prof. Gerard ‘t Hooft.

Leyla Isik

Leyla Isik
Affiliation Johns Hopkins University
Biography Leyla is the Clare Boothe Luce Assistant Professor of Cognitive Science at Johns Hopkins University, and holds a secondary appointment in the department of Biomedical Engineering. Before joining JHU, Leyla was a postdoc at MIT and Harvard in the Center for Brains, Minds, and Machines, where she worked with Nancy Kanwisher and Gabriel Kreiman. She received her PhD from MIT where she was advised by Tomaso Poggio, and was an undergraduate right here at JHU.