Draft:Vladimir J. Lumelsky

https://directory.engr.wisc.edu/me/faculty/lumelsky_vladimir

  • Comment: You have to prove both his notability and all statements. For instance, we don't want a reference to Yale, we need proof that he had the academic position. The same elsewhere; for instance no proof that he was a founding editor. Please also pay careful attention to WP:NACADEMIC and avoid WP:PUFF. Rewritten cleanly he might make it. Ldm1954 (talk) 18:28, 5 November 2023 (UTC)


Vladimir J. Lumelsky
Academic career


Vladimir J. Lumelsky

Vladimir Lumelsky is an American scientist and engineer in the fields of robotics, machine intelligence, and sensing. He is currently a professor emeritus at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and senior books editor at the Wiley-IEEE Press Publisher.

Background edit

Lumelsky was born in 1939 in Kharkiv, Ukraine. He received his master’s degree in computer science in 1962 from the Leningrad Institute of Precision Mechanics and Optics (presently ITMO University[1], St. Petersburg, Russia), and his Ph.D. degree in applied mathematics in 1971 from the Institute of Control Sciences (ICS), Russia’s National Academy, Moscow. He then stayed at ICS as a junior and senior researcher till his emigration from Russia in 1975. In the West Lumelsky’s professional career spanned research in large industrial research centers, university professorships, and government research and administration.

In the United States Lumelsky first worked as a researcher in Ford Motor Co. Scientific Laboratories[2], 1976-1980, then as a senior researcher at the General Electric Research Center[3], 1981-1985. Having moved then to academia, he held positions of professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1991-2003 (with joint professorships at electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, computer science, and mathematics departments), and an adjunct professor at the University of Maryland-College Park[4], 2004-13.

In 1999-2001 he held a concurrent rotator (IPA) position of program director at the National Science Foundation (NSF), leading NSF’s national robotics program. Within this assignment, as the NSF representative he spent the summer term of 2000-2001 at the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station in Antarctica. In 2003 he retired from academia and spent the next ten years at NASA Goddard Space Center, leading the laboratory of space robotics that focused on Mars exploration.

Lumelsky has served as a visiting professor at the Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan, and the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel. He was the founding editor-in-chief of the IEEE Sensors Journal, 2001-2003, senior editor of the IEEE Transactions on Robotics and Automation, and President of the IEEE Sensors Council, 2012-2013, which represents 25 societies of IEEE. As a Distinguished Lecturer of IEEE, he has lectured extensively in many countries in Europe, Asia, and South America. He is an IEEE Life Fellow[5] (1994, “For contributions to the field of robotics and automation, particularly development of the theory of sensor-based motion planning in an uncertain environment”), and is listed in Marquis’s Who is Who[6]. Professor Lumelsky received the IEEE Sensors Council Meritorious Service Award[7]," for contributions to the establishment and development of the IEEE Sensors Journal, and for service as its Founding Editor-in-Chief, and ongoing contribution to the Council including Sensor Council President 2012-2013.

Research edit

Lumelsky’s research has focused on robotics, machine intelligence, and automatic control. His theory of sensor-based motion planning (SBMP) has introduced a new type of artificial intelligence for robots based on topological properties of space. Using those principles, his team has experimentally demonstrated that a robot can guarantee reaching its target location or concluding the target’s unreachability, in a completely unknown and highly crowded environment. When generalized to three-dimensional arm manipulators, those same principles lead to motion planning strategies for operating in a highly uncertain environment way beyond human intelligence. The strategies also allow a robot’s intelligent response to a human partner’s motion without any prior robot motion programming. These and related principles have been presented in over 250 publications, and summarized in his book, "Sensing, Intelligence, Motion: How Robots and Humans Move in an Unstructured World".

Personal life edit

Lumelsky is married to biologist Nadya Lumelsky, who has spent most of her career as a researcher and a branch chief at the National Institutes of Health. He has two children - Anna Lumelsky, a graduate of Harvard Law School, presently the division chief deputy at the office of Attorney General of Massachusetts, and son Michael Lumelsky, a graduate of New York University.

Scientific Career edit

  • Fields Robotics
  • Machine Intelligence
  • Sensing
  • Industry Ford Motor Co.
  • General Electric Corp.
  • Academia Institute of Control Problems, Russian National Academy, Moscow
  • University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Maryland University-College Park
  • Government National Science Foundation
  • NASA

References edit

  1. ^ "ITMO". Retrieved 15 September 2023.
  2. ^ "Ford Labs". Retrieved 15 September 2023.
  3. ^ "GE Research". Retrieved 15 September 2023.
  4. ^ "UMD College Park". Retrieved 15 September 2023.
  5. ^ "IEEE Fellow". IEEE.
  6. ^ Marquis Who's Who. 2003.
  7. ^ "IEEE Sensors Council Award". IEEE. 22 October 2022. Retrieved 29 October 2023.

External Links edit

[1][2][3] [4][5]

  1. ^ "IEEELife Fellow, Dr. Vladimir Lumelsky, visited China to lecture on Robotics". Retrieved 29 October 2023.
  2. ^ "A Guest from University of Wisconsin-Madison". 16 November 2012. Retrieved 29 October 2023.
  3. ^ "Почетный профессор Владимир Лумельский: как искусственная «чувствительная» кожа, математика и новые алгоритмы научат роботов жить среди людей" [Honorary Professor Vladimir Lumelsky: how artificial “sensitive” skin, mathematics and new algorithms will teach robots to live among people]. June 2017. Retrieved 29 October 2023.
  4. ^ "IEEE Xplore". Retrieved 29 October 2023.
  5. ^ "HUMAN-ROBOT INTERACTION AND WHOLE-BODY ROBOT SENSING - DR VLADIMIR LUMELSKY, UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON". www.gla.ac.uk. 1 July 2016. Retrieved 2023-10-29.