The goal of my research is to enable the widespread deployment of mobile robots that are capable of completing tasks reliably while interacting naturally with people. In pursuit of this vision, I am interested in developing robot learning systems that are sample efficient, robust to real-world uncertainty, and informed by technically grounded methods that predict and optimize for human-centric values such as competence, comfort, and social appropriateness.
I am currently a postdoctoral researcher with Texas Robotics at the University of Texas, Austin, advised by Joydeep Biswas and part of the Autonomous Mobile Robotics Laboratory (AMRL). I received my PhD in Computer Science from Yale University, where my doctoral work introduced new simulation platforms, evaluation frameworks, and data-driven methods for aligning mobile robot behavior with human social values. At Yale, advised by Marynel Vázquez and was a member of the Interactive Machines Group. Before my PhD, I worked as a research engineer at the Stanford AI Lab in the Computational Vision and Geometry Lab and as a senior software engineer at Sequoia Capital.
Date | Event | Location |
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July 15, 2025 | Joined Texas Robotics and the Autonomous Mobile Robotics Laboratory (AMRL) as a postdoctoral researcher. | Austin, TX, USA. |
May 27, 2025 | Thesis defense: Creating Socially Competent Mobile Robots: Rethinking How to Measure Success. | New Haven, CT, USA. |
May 23, 2025 | Co-organizing the 2025 Workshop on Advances in Social Navigation: Planning, HRI and Beyond in conjunction with ICRA'25. | Atlanta, GA, USA. |