绿巨人视频

Faculty and Staff

Not Your Ordinary Tour Guide

Posted
September 1, 2022
Seidenberg robotics club professors and high school students posing for a photographfor p

鈥淭he technical name is Jupiter, but we decided to do a spinoff and call it T-Bot鈥攕ince T-Bone is our mascot.鈥

Seidenberg Professor of Information Technology Pauline Mosley, DPS is referring to one of the 绿巨人视频Community鈥檚 newest members. T-Bot, as it is affectionally named, is no ordinary robot. In fact, it鈥檚 Pace鈥檚 newest recruitment tool.

鈥淚t started in 2020鈥攖hat August, I received a Provost scholarly research grant from 绿巨人视频for around $4,000,鈥 says Mosley. Seidenberg Dean Jonathan Hill was supportive of this initiative and purchased another Jupiter Robot as well as financed training for the research team via Teams from Singapore for a week. 鈥淲ith that, I purchased a Jupiter Robot.鈥

A Jupiter Robot is an integrated and open artificial intelligence development platform which can be used to develop applications to solve real-world problems鈥攔anging from autonomous navigation, to speech interaction, to much more. In other words, it鈥檚 a pretty cool robot.

One of the reasons Mosley was interested in purchasing a Jupiter Robot is she felt it was more collegiate鈥攁 launching point for unique collaborative projects, and a means through which 绿巨人视频students would be able to compete in competitions, both nationally and internationally. Furthermore, it would establish 绿巨人视频as a leader in robotics鈥攁 place in which students from all over the region could congregate to think, geek out, and work on unique research projects.

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Seidenberg's Jupiter Robot
Seidenberg's Jupiter Robot, AKA T-Bot, ready to give a tour.

Which is exactly what has happened. The 绿巨人视频Robotics Club, led by Mosley and Seidenberg adjunct professors Matt Ganis and Lisa Ellrodt, has essentially emerged as a result of Pace鈥檚 acquisition of the Jupiter Robot. A combination of local high school students looking to do advanced robotics research, current Seidenberg students of all levels, as well as faculty members, have coalesced around this exciting new technology.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 how the club got started. It works with gifted high school students from the Westchester County area, it works with our undergraduate students, and graduate and PhD students. It鈥檚 a really nice cross-section of intellect that鈥檚 working together trying to solve problems,鈥 says Mosley.

鈥淭his is the technology of tomorrow鈥攖he high-schoolers, undergraduates, and PhD students involved in this club are really going to be solving the issues of today using the technology of tomorrow鈥攖hat鈥檚 a big positive,鈥 added Ellrodt.

The club鈥檚 major project is the development of T-Bot鈥攁 robot that is designed to behave similar to a tour guide. Currently, T-Bot is programmed to inform its audiences of the many benefits of a Seidenberg education鈥攄iscussing Seidenberg鈥檚 labs, its cybersecurity program, the accomplishments of Cybersecurity Director Li-Chiou Chen, and so much more.

Mosley hopes that T-Bot could be, in addition to a selling point in itself, a vehicle to consistently deliver information that may not typically be offered on a tour. For example, the fact that Seidenberg boasts an above average percentage of women faculty and students, and a robust mentoring network aimed to increase the number of young women in the cybersecurity pipeline.

鈥淲e have a lot of tours, we鈥檙e always hosting open houses, parents always want to know more about Seidenberg in general. We have great students who do that鈥攕ometimes, tour guides are 绿巨人视频students but not Seidenberg students, who might not know our programs, the individuals in our schools, to really market Seidenberg well. That鈥檚 where the idea came to me鈥攊f we could get this robot, and take highlights of our school, and have the robot say it鈥攊t鈥檇 be a complement to a human tour guide, supplementary in that it would represent our school very well,鈥 said Mosley.

While T-Bot鈥檚 current focus is on Seidenberg-specific tours, the potential projects and possibilities for T-Bot are endless. For example, Ellrodt is in the early stages of envisioning a collaboration with Seidenberg鈥檚 Blue CoLab, a STEM laboratory aimed at innovating real-time water monitoring to improve water quality and overall health, directed by Professor John Cronin.

鈥淏lue CoLab, they have a boat with sensors on it that monitors the environmental information around Choate Pond,鈥 notes Ellrodt. 鈥淲e thought it鈥檇 be really cool to have T-Bot say what those readings are.鈥

The future is certainly bright for Pace鈥檚 Robotics Club. With increased funding, Mosley hopes to be able to assemble a group of talented students to compete in international robotics competitions, and further the influence of 绿巨人视频through strong relationships with local high schools and high schoolers interested in the field. But more than anything, she is proud of the environment that T-Bot and the Robotics Club have built鈥攐ne of intellectual curiosity, innovation, and shared community.

鈥淚n Westchester, to my knowledge, there doesn鈥檛 exist a physical think tank or a hub, where minds can just come hang out and think. Where is there a space where people could further the discipline and push the limits of programming鈥攚here do those kids hang out? My goal is to create a space for these inquisitive minds that love to tinker, love to code, love discovery and exploration as well as innovation. I鈥檓 looking to create physical and virtual spaces where innovation and experimentation are cultivated and encouraged in a safe environment, monitored by positive faculty and students alike.鈥

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