Robin Roberson Murphy is an American computer scientist and roboticist. She is the Raytheon Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at Texas A&M University. She is known as a founder of the fields of rescue robotics and human-robot interaction and for inserting robots into disasters. Her case studies of how unmanned systems under perform in the field led cognitive engineer to pose the Murphy's Law of Autonomy: a deployment of robotic systems will fall short of the target level of autonomy, creating or exacerbating a shortfall in mechanisms for coordination with human problem holders. Her TED talk was listed in as one of the examples of a good TED talk. Murphy is also known for using science fiction as an innovative method of teaching artificial intelligence and robotics.
Murphy began research into disaster robotics in 1995, motivated by the Oklahoma City bombing. Murphy was the director of the from 2002 to 2018, and now serves as the vice-president. Through CRASAR she participated in the 9/11 World Trade Center disaster, considered the first use of robots for the emergency response phase of a disaster. Since then she has helped insert unmanned ground, aerial, and marine systems into 27 disasters including Hurricane Katrina, which is considered the first use of small unmanned aerial systems, the Fukishima Daiichi nuclear accident, the Tōhoku tsunami, the Syrian Boat Refugee crisis, and Hurricane Harvey. She wrote the seminal text , MIT Press, in 2014.
She inspired the character of Jae, a rescue roboticist who worked at Disaster City, in Skinner, a science fiction book by Charlie Huston.
Murphy has edited a book, ' by Isaac Asimov, Brian Aldiss, Vernor Vinge, and Philip K. Dick, to illustrate key principles in programming artificial intelligence for robotics. The book was originally intended as a companion to the second edition of her textbook Introduction to AI Robotics but it serves as a stand-alone book for a non-technical audience.
Since 2018, she writes monthly 'science fiction science fact' focus articles for ' analyzing the realism of robots in the media including Star Wars and Westworld.
Her blog ' discusses the scientific accuracy of books and movies.
Awards and honors
She was elected as an ACM Fellow in 2019 "for contributions in founding and advancing the field of computing for disasters and robotics".
In 2014, Murphy received the Association for Computing Machinery Eugene L. Lawler Award for Humanitarian Contributions within Computer Science and Informatics. Her humanitarian work has been honored with the 2009 Motohiro Kisoi Award for academic contributions to rescue engineering and the AUVSI Foundation's Al Aube Outstanding Contributor Award in 2008.
In 2010, she was made an IEEE Fellow “for contributions to rescue robotics and insertion of robots into major disasters.”
Murphy is frequently cited in the popular press as a WIRED Magazine 'AlphaGeek', one of , one of the and one of the .
Murphy was featured in the documentary short film and web film, , shown at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival, with a 90-second version distributed to national movie theaters preceding Inception.