Short bio: Stephen Intille, Ph.D., is a professor in the Khoury College of Computer Sciences and the Bouvé College of Health Sciences at Northeastern University. His research focuses on the development of novel healthcare technologies that incorporate ideas from ubiquitous computing, user-interface design, pattern recognition, behavioral science, and preventive medicine. Areas of special interest include technologies for measuring and motivating health-related behaviors, technologies that support healthy aging and well-being in the home setting, and mobile technologies that permit longitudinal measurement of health behaviors for research, especially the type, duration, intensity, and location of physical activity. Dr. Intille received his Ph.D. in 1999 from MIT, where he worked on computational vision at the MIT Media Laboratory. He also earned an S.M. from MIT in 1994 and a B.S.E. in Computer Science and Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania in 1992. He has published research on computational stereo depth recovery, real-time and multi-agent tracking, activity recognition, perceptually-based interactive environments, and technology for healthcare. Dr. Intille has been principal investigator on sensor-enabled health technology grants from the NSF, the NIH, foundations, and industry. After ten years as Technology Director of the House_n Research Consortium at MIT, in 2010 he joined Northeastern University to help establish a new transdisciplinary Ph.D. program in Personal Health Informatics, which he directed through 2023. He currently serves as the area chair for human-centered computing at Khoury College. Home page: http://khoury.neu.edu/home/intille
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