Her research has included methods for testing the intelligence of artificially intelligent systems,[2] using sensors in home automation to detect mental issues in older residents,[3] developing robotic home care assistants,[4] adapting to the habits of smart home owners,[5] and more generally application of ubiquitous computing and ambient intelligence in home automation.[6]
She became an assistant professor at the University of South Florida and a faculty fellow at the NASA Ames Research Center, but quickly moved to the University of Texas at Arlington, becoming professor there in 2001 and University Distinguished Scholar Professor in 2004. In 2006, she moved to Washington State University as Regents Professor and Huie-Rogers Chair.[1]
Books
Cook is the coauthor of:
Smart Environments: Technology, Protocols, and Applications (with Sajal K. Das, Wiley, 2005)
Activity Learning: Discovering, Recognizing, and Predicting Human Behavior from Sensor Data (with Narayanan C. Krishnan, Wiley, 2015)
With Lawrence B. Holder, she is the co-editor of Mining Graph Data (Wiley, 2007).