Jeffrey M. Bradshaw Biography, Age, Height, Wife, Net Worth, Family

Age, Biography and Wiki

Jeffrey M. Bradshaw is an American computer scientist and roboticist. He is a senior research scientist at the Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition (IHMC) in Pensacola, Florida. He is best known for his work in the field of artificial intelligence, robotics, and cognitive science. Bradshaw received his B.S. in Computer Science from the University of Utah in 1978 and his Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of California, Berkeley in 1984. He has held positions at the University of Utah, the University of Southern California, and the University of Washington. Bradshaw has authored or co-authored over 200 publications in the fields of artificial intelligence, robotics, and cognitive science. He is the author of the book "Foundations of Cognitive Systems" (MIT Press, 2008). He is a Fellow of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI) and a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). Bradshaw is married to Dr. Susan G. Bradshaw, a professor of computer science at the University of West Florida. They have two children.

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Age67 years old
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Born, 1956
Birthday
BirthplaceSalt Lake City, Utah, United States
NationalityUnited States

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Jeffrey M. Bradshaw Height, Weight & Measurements

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Jeffrey M. Bradshaw Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Jeffrey M. Bradshaw worth at the age of 67 years old? Jeffrey M. Bradshaw’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from United States. We have estimated Jeffrey M. Bradshaw's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023$1 Million - $5 Million
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Timeline

In June 2018, Jeff and Kathleen completed two years of missionary service in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kinshasa Mission.. They returned in March 2019 to serve in the Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the Congo Temple for six months.

Jeffrey M. Bradshaw (PhD in Cognitive Science, University of Washington) is a Senior Research Scientist at the Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition (IHMC), where he led the research group developing the KAoS policy and domain services framework for distributed systems management and coordination of human-agent-robot teamwork. He also co-leads the development of the Luna Agent Framework and the Sol Cyber Framework. Bradshaw chairs the Scientific Advisory Council for the Nissan Research Center Silicon Valley (NRC-SV), which has the development of autonomous vehicles as a major focus. He and his wife, Kathleen, began a two-year leave of absence from IHMC beginning July 2016 to serve a church mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kinshasa Mission of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and began another six months to serve in the new Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the Congo Temple.

Jeff has been a Fulbright Senior Scholar at the European Institute for Cognitive Sciences and Engineering (EURISCO) in Toulouse, France; a visiting professor at the Institut de Cognitique at the University of Bordeaux; is former chair of ACM SIGART (now SIGAI); and former chair of the RIACS Science Council for NASA Ames Research Center. He served as a member of the National Research Council (NRC) Committee on Emerging Cognitive Neuroscience Research in the Next Two Decades, was an advisor to the HCI and Visualization program at the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI), and was a scientific advisor to the Japanese NEC Technology Paradigm Shifts initiative. He also served as a member of the Board on Global Science and Technology for the National Academies of Science and as an external advisory board member of the Cognitive Science and Technology Program at Sandia National Laboratories. He is an Honorary Visiting Researcher at the Center for Intelligent Systems and their Applications and AIAI at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, a member of the Graduate Faculty at the Florida Institute of Technology, a faculty associate at the University of West Florida, and is a member of the Technical Committee for IEEE Systems, Man and Cybernetics. He was a member of the 2015 Defense Science Board Summer Study on Autonomy. In 2011, he received the Web Intelligence Consortium Outstanding Contributions Award.

Jeff is the co-founder of Interpreter Science and Mormonism Symposium series, including the 2013 meeting entitled "Cosmos, Earth, and Man" and the 2016 meeting entitled "Body, Brain, Mind, and Spirit".

Bradshaw's work on the Sol Cyber Framework was sponsored by the United States Department of Defense to address the demanding requirements of distributed network operations centers. Specifically, Luna software agents, KAoS security and teamwork policies, and visualizations based on an understanding of human perception and cognition are used to enable distributed sensemaking, rapid detection of threats, effective protection of critical resources, and resilient mission assurance. He collaborated with Sandia National Laboratories on the "Human Dimensions of Cyber Operations" initiative. In August 2012, he was an invited speaker at the Second Experimental Security Panoramas for Critical System Protection Workshop.

Bradshaw continued to pioneer the research areas of multi-agent systems. He led the DARPA- and NASA-funded ITAC study team, Software Agents for the Warfighter. He served for over a decade on the Board of Directors of the International Foundation for Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems. In addition to his participation as an organizer in many agent-related conferences, he served as co-program chair for the IEEE / WIC / ACM International Conference on Intelligent Agent Technology (WI-IAT 2011) and was a co-program chair of the Third International Conference on Autonomous Agents (1999). He served as co-program chair for Intelligent User Interfaces (IUI 2008), as program vice chair of the 2008 IEEE International Conference on Distributed Human-Machine Systems (DHMS 2008), and as co-general chair of the 2009 International Conference on Active Media Technologies (AMT). Current work on the Luna Software Agent Framework leverages IHMC's extensive experience in the design of agent systems. He is also well known for his work on KAoS, a policy and domain services framework based on W3C's OWL ontology standard.

Human-Agent-Robot Teamwork has been one of Bradshaw's central interests for many years. From 2002-2006, KAoS was used as part of a NASA series of annual two-week field tests of human-robot teams performing simulated planetary surface exploration at the Mars Desert Research Station in the Utah desert. Bradshaw was sponsored by the Department of Homeland Security to undertake detailed simulation studies of the use of human-robot teams to secure facilities at Port Everglades. He has also led the ONR-sponsored NAIMT and Coordinated Operations projects where a team of humans and heterogeneous robots performed field exercises at the Naval Air Station in Pensacola, aimed at port reconnaissance, and robot-assisted detection and apprehension of intruders. He co-founded and organized the Human-Agent-Robot Teamwork Workshop (HART) series (2010, 2012, 2015, 2016). He served as lead editor for a special issue of IEEE Intelligent Systems on HART and led an international workshop for the National Academies of Science on Intelligent Human-Machine Collaboration. Several of Jeff's co-authored papers relating to the inadequacies of the supervisory control model were cited in a July 2012 Defense Science Board Task Force Report on the role of autonomy in the United States Department of Defense, which recommended that the DoD abandon the use of "levels of autonomy." He served as a member of the 2015 Defense Science Board Summer Study on Autonomy.

Bradshaw has served on the editorial boards of the Journal of Web Semantics, the Journal of Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems, the Knowledge Acquisition Journal, the International Journal of Human-Computer Studies, Schedae Informaticae, and the Web Intelligence Journal. With Robert Hoffman and Ken Ford, he served as co-editor of the Human-Centered Computing Department for IEEE Intelligent Systems and is a co-editor of Collected Essays on Human-Centered Computing, 2001-2011.

In 1997, Bradshaw took a year-long leave-of-absence from Boeing to pursue research at the Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition (IHMC), which was directed by his long-time colleague Ken Ford. In 2000, he joined IHMC full-time.

In 1993, Bradshaw was selected as a Fulbright Senior Scholar. His project brought him to the European Institute for Cognitive Sciences and Engineering (EURISCO) in Toulouse, France. During his year in France, he drafted the manuscript of a book entitled Software Agents, which became a classic in the field and a best-seller for The MIT Press. Bradshaw saw this new direction as a natural evolution from his early work on knowledge acquisition.

From 1985 to 2000, Bradshaw led various research groups at The Boeing Company. Though his earliest publications were focused on memory and language, his research focus soon turned to a wide variety of topics relating human and machine intelligence. With Ken Ford he edited Knowledge Acquisition as a Modeling Activity and became well known for his role in helping develop a suite of successful methodologies and tools for automated knowledge acquisition and for the simplification of complex modeling tasks (Aquinas, Axotl, Canard, DDUCKS). He led the development of eQuality, an interactive visual framework with an underlying ontology-based model for streamlining strategic corporate business processes that was used as the principal enterprise modeling tool for the Boeing 777 airplane program.

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