
Last Lecture!

Follow the ASU Intro to AI
course (Spring 2012) with online videos

Follow the ASU IR/IM/II
course (Fall 2011) with online videos

Back to the
Future of Planning
Visitor number
since yesterday.
Subbarao Kambhampati (Rao) was born a long long time ago in Peddapuram
in Andhra Pradesh, India. After formative education at "the school
next to Cinema Hall"
(where he liked the teacher of the 1st grade so much that he stayed in
that class for 2nd and 3rd grades too), the "School behind
Anjaneyaswamy Temple" (which has since been demolished to make way for
a sweet stall), Sri Veeraraju
High School (S.V. Highschool), and Sri Raja Vatsavaayi Buchchi
Seetayamma Jagapati Bahaddur Maharanee College
(S.R.V.B.S.J.B.M.R. College, no less!), he survived JEE and did his Bachelors in
Electrical Engineering (Electronics!--although he still couldn't
repair the tape recorder to his father's satisfaction) at the Indian Institute of
Technology, Madras. Continuing along his degree grabbing spree, he
landed a Masters and a
Ph.D. degree in Computer Science from the University of Maryland, College Park.
After a brief post-doctoral stint at Stanford, Rao has been having a
blast crawling up the faculty hierarchy in the Computer Science department at ASU
since 1991. He started as a quarter professor, became a half Professor
in 1996 and a FULL (!) Professor in 2000. Continuing this geometric
rise, his current goal is to become two professors very soon (he is
waiting for the furlough season to pass first though, lest he be hit with two
furloughs).
Rao directs the Yochan research
group which is associated with the AI
Lab at ASU. In the good old days, he used to be mostly interested in
automated planning and related areas in AI. To support his mid-life
crisis, to improve chances of schizophrenia, as well as to enter a
world of continual conference deadlines, he decided to also diversify
into
data and information integration on
the Web.
He is the recipient of a 1992
NSF Research Initiation Award, a 1994
NSF young investigator award,
a
2001-2002 College of Engineering teaching
excellence award, and a 2004 IBM Faculty Award . In 2004, he was named a
Fellow of AAAI (American Association for Aritificial Intelligence,
which is now Association for Advancement of Artificial
Intelligence), and in 2011, he was selected by ASU students to give a Last Lecture.
He was an
invited speaker at
AAAI 1996 and
ICAPS 2003. He also
gave a couple of well received tutorials on planning and databases,
including one on automated
planning (AAAI-2000), one on
information
integration on the web (AAAI-2002), and one on
planning graph heuristics.
Click
here
for further biographical information.
Here is a
detailed CV in pdf, and here is
a teaching and research statement (circa late 2002)
He also co-chaired the 2000 AI Planning and Scheduling (AIPS) Conference, and sat on the exalted ICAPS executive committee (2002-2008). He was recently elected a councilor for AAAI for a three year term 2009-2012 (here is his campaign manifesto).
His professional service and his late-night TV viewing intersected for once recently when he agreed to run the first-ever Festivus at an academic conference!
He was an associate editor for the Journal of AI Research during 2/2004--2/2007 and joined the advisory board for a three year term. He is on the editorial board of IEEE Intelligent Systems and the AI Magazine.
He had been on the progam committees of most AAAIs since 1992; all AIPS, (most) ECP and all ICAPS conferences, as well as a smattering of database conferences. He served on the senior program committees of AAAI 2006,2008 and IJCAI 2007 and 2009.

Back to the Future of Planning, talk at
ACAI/ICAPS Summer School on Automated Planning and Scheduling

Incomplete Domain Models, Uncertain Users and Open Worlds: Model-Lite
Planning for Autonomy in the Presence of Humans, talk at ONR/IPAM
Machine Reasoning workshop. Oct 2010.

Preferences and
Partial Satisfaction in Planning. A tutorial delivered at AAAI
2010 (with J. Benton and Jorge Baier).

Incomplete domain models, uncertain users and open worlds: Foundations
of Model-lite Planning Seminar at CMU Robotics Institute; 4/2/2010
(Streaming
video)
Rao thinks it is way cool to get paid for filling space with the sound of his own voice. Some students seem to agree with him, going as far as to get him assorted teaching awards Others are more inscrutable, trying their best to make him give the last lecture.
Here, at any rate, are student comments and beauty numbers from the teaching evaluations. Finally, here is an ornate statement of his teaching philosophy that Rao was asked to write for a teaching award nomination. Here is a bit of media coverage of Rao's teaching methods (and here he is trying to improve his publication count through letters to editor)..

Candidacy: 4/22/2011 (Presentation video and
audio)

Candidacy: 2/22/2011 (Presentation video and
audio)

(defended [Aug 26, 2011])
( Thesis, Slides and Presentation video) (Off to Amazon)

(defended [Aug 19, 2011])
(Thesis,
Slides and Presentation video) (Off to Amazon)