Biography
Justin Bradley is an associate professor in the Computer Science Department at North Carolina State University. Previously he was a Richard L. and Carol S. McNeel Associate Professor of Computing in the School of Computing at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. He holds a B.S. in computer engineering (2005) and M.S. in electrical engineering (2007) from Brigham Young University, and M.S. (2012) and Ph.D. (2014) degrees in aerospace engineering from the University of Michigan. He has worked with Uncrewed Aircraft Systems (UAS) since 2005, starting at the Multi-AGent Intelligent Coordination and Control (MAGICC) lab at BYU, the A2Sys lab at the University of Michigan, and most recently as a co-director of the Nebraska Intelligent MoBile Unmanned System (NIMBUS) lab since 2015. He is a recipient of a 2021 NSF CAREER award and is an AIAA Associate Fellow. Justin's research is focused on cyber-physical systems particularly as it relates to control, autonomy, software, and computing for aerospace vehicles. A common theme in his research is developing algorithms that can dynamically adjust their resource utilization in response to uncertainty, adjusting performance as needed to meet demands. To ensure safe, reliable, robust systems he also studies autonomy software, how it evolves, and how to test it to validate performance of complex systems.
Research Areas
- Artificial Intelligence and Intelligent Agents
- Cyber-Physical Systems
- Embedded and Real-Time Systems
Education
- PhD, 2014, Aerospace Engineering, University of Michigan
- MS, 2012, Aerospace Engineering, University of Michigan
- MS, 2007, Electrical Engineering, Brigham Young University
- BS, 2005, Computer Engineering, Brigham Young University
CSC Fall Courses
- CSC 591-001 LEC SP Topic CSC - Cyber-Physical Systems: Contro MW 10:15am-11:30am Room: 1212 Engineering Building 2