Lydia E. Kavraki is the Noah Harding
Professor of Computer Science at Rice University. She
also holds a joint appointment at the Department of Bioengineering
at Rice and the Department of Structural and Computational
Biology and Molecular Biophysics at the Baylor College
of Medicine in Houston. Kavraki received a B.A. in Computer
Science from the University of Crete in Greece, and a
Ph.D. in Computer Science from Stanford University. Kavraki's
research contributions are in physical algorithms and
their applications in robotics, computational structural
biology, and bioinformatics. In robotics she has made
seminal contributions in robot motion planning, assembly
planning, micromanipulation using microelectromechanical
systems, and flexible object manipulation. In structural
computational biology, Kavraki has pioneered an algorithmic
framework for modeling receptor-ligand interactions, has
worked on computer-assisted drug design and the large-scale
functional annotation of proteins. A unifying theme in
her work is the investigation of algorithms and system
architectures for solving complex geometric problems with
physical constraints that arise in the real world.
Kavraki has authored more than seventy
peer-reviewed journal and conference publications, has
served as the co-editor of one book, and is one of the
authors of a textbook on robotic to be published in 2004
by MIT Press. She served as an associate editor for the
IEEE Transactions on Robotics and Automation from 2000
to 2002; and currently is an associate editor for the
IEEE Robotics Magazine, the IEEE Transactions on Computational
Biology and Bioinformatics and a member of the editorial
advisory board of the Springer Tracts in Advanced Robotics.
Kavraki was the recipient of the 2000 Association for
Computing Machinery Grace Murray Hopper Award for her
work on path planning. She has also received a National
Science Foundation CAREER award, a Sloan Fellowship, and
the Early Academic Career Award from the IEEE Society
on Robotics and Automation and the Duncan Award for excellence
in research and teaching from Rice University. Kavraki
was included in the list of Top 100 Young Innovators of
the MIT Technology Review Magazine in 2002. She was inducted
to the College of Fellows of the American Institute for
Medical and Biological Engineering in 2004.
More information on Kavraki's work
can be found at: http://www.cs.rice.edu/~kavraki
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