Research Statement

My long term research goal is visual understanding through extended robotic interactions with the world. I am interested in processing EO/IR video from an actively moving image sensor over long periods. My goal is to generate useful visual measurements with predicted error characteristics, to enable autonomous intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance tasks in robotics. I seek to create a robust robotic vision system that can solve probabilistic visual inference and generalized correspondence problems in unconstrained outdoor environments. Broad themes of my work have been computer vision to enable outdoor robotic autonomy, visual collision detection, image segmentation using perceptual organization, inertial measurement aiding for vision, visual navigation and real time embedded video processing.

Projects

My current work is focused on computer vision for unmanned air vehicles (UAVs):

Completed projects at the Carnegie Mellon University Robotics Institute (CMU-RI):

Biography

Jeffrey Byrne is a senior research engineer at Scientific Systems Company Inc. (SSCI) in Woburn MA, working in the areas of Computer Vision and Robotics. He has a BS (1996) and MS (1997) in Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) from Carnegie Mellon University, and he is also affiliated with the GRASP Lab at the University of Pennsylvania under an NDSEG fellowship . Prior to joining SSCI, Mr. Byrne worked as a consultant to Carnegie Mellon University on the Micro Vision Engine hardware platform for micro air vehicles (MAV), and as a research staff member in the CMU Robotics Institute working on image segmentation and classification, high-speed vision based inspection, real time vision for helicopter perception and stereo vision based autonomous mobile robot navigation. He also worked as a engineering manager in an embedded hardware start-up company in Silicon Valley. He is a US Citizen and has a Secret level clearance.