20 Facts About Rosalind Picard

1.

Rosalind Wright Picard was born on May 17,1962 and is an American scholar and inventor who is Professor of Media Arts and Sciences at MIT, founder and director of the Affective Computing Research Group at the MIT Media Lab, and co-founder of the startups Affectiva and Empatica.

2.

Rosalind Picard has received many recognitions for her research and inventions.

3.

Rosalind Picard holds a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering with highest honors and a certificate in computer engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology, and master's and doctorate degrees, both in electrical engineering and computer science, from MIT.

4.

Rosalind Picard has been a member of the faculty at the MIT Media Laboratory since 1991, with tenure since 1998 and a full professorship since 2005.

5.

Rosalind Picard is a researcher in the field of affective computing and the founder and director of the Affective Computing Research Group at the MIT Media Lab.

6.

Rosalind Picard explains the need to monitor emotional cues and how this is present with humans when she states:.

7.

Rosalind Picard's work has influenced many fields beyond computer science, ranging from video games to law.

8.

In 2009, Rosalind Picard co-founded Affectiva, along with Rana el Kaliouby, and became the company's chief scientist for the next four years.

9.

Rosalind Picard was based on technologies the two began developing at the Affective Computing Research Group within the MIT Media Lab.

10.

Rosalind Picard's team showed that physiological changes in the emotion system could help identify seizures that might be life-threatening.

11.

Besides researching robotic intelligence, Rosalind Picard has performed research in the field of autism.

12.

Rosalind Picard's team created an "emotional-social intelligence prosthesis", that allowed a person diagnosed with autism to monitor their own facial reactions in order to educate them on social cues in others.

13.

Rosalind Picard revealed parts of this technology at the 11th Annual International Symposium on Wearable Computers.

14.

Rosalind Picard has put forward theories to improve the research of emotions through the implementation of new technologies with a focus to gather emotional information outside of a lab setting.

15.

Rosalind Picard argues against nomothetic research over idiographic research when it comes to studying emotions claiming that an individualized approach would be more fruitful than just throwing out data when a group correlation is not found.

16.

Rosalind Picard was raised an atheist, but converted to Christianity as a young adult.

17.

Rosalind Picard believes it likely that there is "still something more" to life, beyond what we have discovered, and sees DNA as too complex to have originated through "purely random processes".

18.

Rosalind Picard sees her religious beliefs as playing a role in her work in affective computing, and explains that when "Digging into the models of how the emotions work, I find I feel even greater awe and appreciation for the way we are made, and therefore for the Maker that has brought this about".

19.

Rosalind Picard is one of the signatories of the Discovery Institute's A Scientific Dissent From Darwinism, a petition which states that: We are skeptical of claims for the ability of random mutation and natural selection to account for the complexity of life.

20.

Rosalind Picard argues that the media has created a false dilemma by dividing everyone into two groups, supporters of intelligent design or evolution.