I studied computer science at NDSU. Before university, I dabbled in game development and intended to go pro when I graduated. Somewhere along the way I got into research instead. I became a professional student and completed my masters & doctorate in computer science. My interests in computer science include graphics, AI, routing, scheduling problems, simulations, data visualizations and procedurally generated content.
I'm a charter member of the NDSU Chapter of Upsilon Pi Epsilon, a recipient of the NDSU Presidential Fellowship and an Astronaut Scholarship Foundation scholar.
Likes: | opengl java procedural-generation octave c# image-processing |
Returned to Concordia College as adjunct faculty after the computer science major was reinstated. Taught three sections of Introductory Computer Science.
Developed a turn based strategy game engine. Responsibilities included: code design, implementation, documentation, unit testing, data design and prototyping game mechanics. Technology used included: Java, JMonkeyEngine, Subversion, & YAML (snake-YAML).
Research and development of UAV and autonomous Mars rover mission planning algorithms.
Taught introductory computer science problem solving course.
Assumed full responsibility for course including: lecturing, grading & preparing all course materials.
Taught in both traditional and on-line distance learning settings.
Participated and contributed to group research of UAV mission planning.
Duties included: independent code testing, design, implementation, and testing of simulation models, AI models and corresponding visualizations of these systems.
Dissertation Topic: “Optimization and Heuristic Models for Constrained Resource Collection Problems.”
Advisor: Dr. Kendall E. Nygard.
Cumulative GPA: 4.0
2006-2008 Recipient of the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation Scholarship.
2006-2008 Recipient of the NDSU Presidential Doctoral Graduate Fellowship.
Charter member of local Upsilon Pi Epsilon chapter.
Thesis Topic: “An Optimization Model for Autonomous Agent Task Planning.”
Advisor: Dr. Kendall E. Nygard.
Cumulative GPA: 4.0
2005-2006 Recipient of the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation Scholarship.
2005-2006 Recipient of the NDSU Presidential Doctoral Graduate Fellowship.
2005 Recipient of the ND Space Grant Research Assistantship.
2006 NDSU TopCoder programming competition 3rd place.
2006 Nominated for NDSU Gunkelman Award.
Minors in Psychology and Mathematics.
Cumulative GPA: 3.71
Graduated with honors.
NDSU College of Mathematics and Science Dean's List.
Gold Key National Honor Society Sophomore Award.
Doctoral dissertation. Problem of interest concerns a team of autonomous, heterogeneous mobile agents seeking to cooperatively complete temporarily constrained objectives. This work presents a taxonomy of related problems and examines the general problem of interest within the context of sensor networks. Optimal and heuristic schedulers are proposed and empirically evaluated.
Presents an aspect-oriented, multi-agent, architectural description language as a mechanism for reasoning about cross-cutting concerns with respect to designing and developing software for an ambient intelligence (AmI) systems.