Diane J. Cook
Occupation(s)Computer scientist, educator
EmployerWashington State University

Diane Joyce Cook is an American computer scientist whose research interests include artificial intelligence, data mining, machine learning, home automation, and smart environments. She is Regents Professor and Huie-Rogers Chair Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Washington State University.[1]

Her research has included methods for testing the intelligence of artificially intelligent systems,[2] using sensors in home automation to detect mental issues in older residents,[3] developing robotic home care assistants,[4] adapting to the habits of smart home owners,[5] and more generally application of ubiquitous computing and ambient intelligence in home automation.[6]

Education and career

Cook studied mathematics and computer science at Wheaton College (Illinois), graduating in 1985. She went to the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign for graduate study, earning a master's degree in 1987 on the automation of music notation under the joint supervision of computer scientist William Kubiz and experimental musician Sever Tipei, and completing a Ph.D. in 1990 on topics related to planning in artificial intelligence, supervised by Robert Stepp.[1]

She became an assistant professor at the University of South Florida and a faculty fellow at the NASA Ames Research Center, but quickly moved to the University of Texas at Arlington, becoming professor there in 2001 and University Distinguished Scholar Professor in 2004. In 2006, she moved to Washington State University as Regents Professor and Huie-Rogers Chair.[1]

Books

Cook is the coauthor of:

  • Smart Environments: Technology, Protocols, and Applications (with Sajal K. Das, Wiley, 2005)
  • Activity Learning: Discovering, Recognizing, and Predicting Human Behavior from Sensor Data (with Narayanan C. Krishnan, Wiley, 2015)

With Lawrence B. Holder, she is the co-editor of Mining Graph Data (Wiley, 2007).

Recognition

Cook was named a Fellow of the IEEE in 2008, "for contributions to machine learning algorithm design and application".[7] In 2016 she was named a Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Curriculum vitae (PDF), Washington State University, retrieved 2021-08-06
  2. Stiffler, Lisa (December 17, 2019), "What's the best way to measure the smarts of AI systems? Researchers are developing an IQ test", GeekWire, retrieved 2021-08-06
  3. Lind, Treva (June 4, 2021), "WSU, Gonzaga researchers look at software to detect cognitive decline to assist senior living", The Spokesman-Review, retrieved 2021-08-06
  4. Allison, Peter Ray (April 22, 2019), "Will we ever have robot carers?", BBC Future, BBC
  5. Campbell, Macgregor (September 2, 2009), "Smart home knows just how you like your breakfast", New Scientist, retrieved 2021-08-06
  6. Holloway, James (April 16, 2012), "Watchers, carers, and administrators: the smart homes of tomorrow", Ars Technica
  7. IEEE Fellows directory, IEEE, retrieved 2021-08-06
  8. Gomez, Erik (December 13, 2016), "Cook named a fellow of National Academy of Inventors", WSU Insider, Washington State University, retrieved 2021-08-06
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