A/Prof. Stephan Chalup
| Work Phone | (02) 492 16080 |
|---|---|
| Fax | (02) 492 16929 |
| Stephan.Chalup@newcastle.edu.au | |
| Position |
Associate Professor
School of Elect Engineering and Computer Science
|
| Office | ES227, Engineering Science |
Biography
Stephan K. Chalup is an Associate Professor in Computer Science and Software Engineering at the University of Newcastle, Australia. He received his Ph.D. in Computer Science (Machine Learning) from Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane. He spent his undergraduate years in Germany at the University of Konstanz and later completed a Diploma in Mathematics with Biology (~Masters by Research) at the University of Heidelberg.
He is the leader of the Newcastle Robotics Laboratory and of the Interdisciplinary Machine Learning Research Group (IMLRG). His research interests include autonomous agents, computer vision, dimensionality reduction, human centered computing, machine learning, and neural information processing systems. He has published over 70 articles and received research grants with a total value of over a million dollars. He is a member of the ACM, the ACS and a senior member of the IEEE.
Qualifications
- PhD, Queensland University of Technology, 2001
- Diplom in Mathematiker (equiv Degree), University of Heidelberg
Research
Research keywords
- Autonomous Robots
- Computational Intelligence
- Data Mining
- Dimensionality Reduction and Kernel Methods
- Machine Learning
- Medical Image Analysis
- Neural Information Processing
- Vision and Image Processing
Research expertise
The Interdisciplinary Machine Learning Research Group (IMLRG) and the Newcastle Robotics Laboratory have the common objective to advance research in the area of Anthropocentric Biocybernetic Computing. It investigates the complex interactions between humans and their environment on all levels including the cell-, circuit-, and body-levels and the ecosystem. When applied to real-world computing and autonomous agents the aim is to develop systems that approximate human-like skills on tasks such as vision processing, facial expression analysis, space representation, and human-robot interaction. Machine learning techniques are employed for fine tuning the parameters of general models until they perform at extraordinary levels of skill on selected tasks. Biologically motivated models are complemented by alternative designs. The strategy is to approximate human-level skills in artificial systems from several different directions, that is, through interdisciplinary projects in collaboration with experts from relevant disciplines. Associated projects involve computer vision, data mining, machine learning, pattern recognition, time series analysis, and intelligent system design.
Collaboration
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany, Institute AIFB.
Languages
- English
- German
Fields of Research
| Code | Description | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| 080100 | Artificial Intelligence And Image Processing | 70 |
| 120100 | Architecture | 20 |
| 080200 | Computation Theory And Mathematics | 10 |
Centres and Groups
Centre
- Hunter Medical Research Institute
- PRC - Priority Research Centre for Bioinformatics, Biomarker Discovery and Information-Based Medicine
Group
- Applied Informatics Research Group (AIR)
- Hunter Medical Research Institute - Information Based Medicine Program
Memberships
Body relevant to professional practice.
- Member - Senior Member of the IEEE
- Member - Australian Computer Society (ACS)
Editorial Board.
- Editor - Central European Journal of Computer Science
- Member - International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems
Awards
International Competition
| 2008 |
RoboCup World Champion
RoboCup Federation (China) First place for the NUManoid robot soccer team in the Standard Platform League |
|---|---|
| 2006 |
RoboCup World Champion
RoboCup Federation (Germany) First place for the NUbot robot soccer team in the Four Legged League. |
Administrative
Administrative expertise
Held various administrative responsibilities including: Robotics lab coordinator, leader of the IMLRG research group, seminar coordinator, marketing coordinator, examinations officer, Computer Science Honours coordinator 2/2006 and 2011, BE(software) programme convenor 2007, and Student Academic Conduct Officer (SACO) 2010 to date.
Teaching
Teaching keywords
- Computer Graphics
- Computer Vision
- Machine Intelligence
- Machine Learning
Teaching expertise
Full-time lecturer since 2001. Taught courses in machine intelligence, computer graphics, computer linguistics, computer vision, internet communications, biocomputation and advanced machine learning.