Margrit Betke is an Associate Professor of Computer Science at Boston
University, where she co-leads the Image and Video Computing Research
Group, and a Research Scientist at the Massachusetts General Hospital
and Harvard Medical School. She conducts research in computer vision,
in particular, the development and application of advanced methods for
detection, segmentation, registration, and tracking of objects in
visible-light, infrared, and x-ray image data. She has worked on
gesture, vehicle, and animal tracking, video-based human-computer
interfaces, statistical object recognition, and medical imaging
analysis. She has published over 50 original research papers. She
earned her Ph.D. degree in Computer Science and Electrical Engineering
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1995. Prof. Betke has
received the National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career
Development Award in 2001 for developing "Video-based Interfaces for
People with Severe Disabilities." She was one of two academic
honorees of the "Top 10 Women to Watch in New England Award" by Mass
High Tech in 2005.
Prof. Betke's research has been supported by the NSF grants
0713229,
0093367,
0308213,
0326483,
0329009,
0202067, and
9871219:
-
HCC: Intelligent Interfaces to Empower People with Disabilities to
Participate in the Information Society,
0713229
-
CAREER: Video-Based Computer Interfaces for People with Severe
Disabilities,
0093367
-
Mining and Indexing Spatio-Temporal Patterns in Video Databases of
Human Motion,
0308213
-
ITR: Advanced Imaging and Information Technology for Assessing the
Ecological and Economic Impact of Brazilian Free-Tailed Bats on
Agroecosystems,
0326483
-
Pattern Discovery in Signed Languages and Gestural Communication,
0329009
-
CISE Research Infrastructure: SENSORIUM: Research Infrastructure for Managing Spatio-Temporal Objects in Video Sensor Network,
0329009
-
MRI: Research Laboratory for Computer Science,
9871219
Prof. Betke's research has also been supported by a grant from the
US Fish and Wildlife, 2008, The Whitaker Foundation, 2001-2004, and a
subcontract from MIT Lincoln Laboratory under a US Air Force prime
contract, 2005.