Jenkins enjoyed playing Atari as a child and wanted to become a videogame designer.[3] He became aware of Alma College because his mother worked with former President Alan Stone. Jenkins studied computer science and mathematics at Alma College.[4] In 1993, he was inducted onto the Alma College Dean's List, and in 1996 won the Senior Leadership Award. Together with his classmate, Jim Blum, Jenkins set up the first Alma College web server in 1997.[3] He moved to Georgia Tech for his graduate studies, working with Jessica Hodgins on simulations of basketball shooting. Jenkins moved to the University of Southern California for his doctoral studies, where he worked with Maja Matarić on humanoid agents. He completed his doctorate in 2003 and was appointed as a postdoctoral researcher.[5]
Research and career
In 2004 Jenkins joined Brown University as an assistant professor.[5] In 2006 he was awarded a Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers for his work on autonomous robot control and perception.[6][7] Here he created a Robot Operating System (ROS) repository to improve reproducibility and interoperability of his robotic systems.[8] He was promoted to associate professor in 2010. In 2013 Jenkins was made a National Geographic explorer.[9] In 2015 Jenkins joined the Computer Science and Engineering Division of the University of Michigan where he was made a professor in Michigan's Robotics Institute.
Jenkins works on robot Learning from Demonstration (LfD), which looks to automate the processes behind human decision making and movement. Robots that are trained using LfD learn from user demonstration (as opposed to learning explicitly from a computer program). For example, Jenkins taught a robot to do the Cabbage Patch by programming it to watch dance moves and then attempt to replicate them.[3] Jenkins uses manifold learning (nonlinear dimensionality reduction) to identify dynamic processes and the fundamental structures of time series data. Jenkins has demonstrated LfD for the control of humanoid robots, the control of prosthetics and vision-based human tracking.[5] He looks to improve public access to high quality robotic systems.[10] With Henry Evans, a gentleman paralysed by stroke, Jenkins delivered a TED Talk on how robotics can benefit humanity.[11] Jenkins created a quadrotor drone that allowed Evans to see parts of the world that had previously been inaccessible to him.[11]
Jenkins has called for more African Americans to get involved with robotics, and for people to be more aware of whether everyone is being given equal opportunities in education and academia.[12] He has supported students from underrepresented backgrounds in their participation at the Tapia Conference for the Celebration of Diversity in Computing.[13] Jenkins led organisation of the Conference for African-Americans in the Mathematical Sciences.[13] In 2019 he was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.[14]
Jenkins, Odest Chadwicke (January 1, 2002). "Automated derivation of primitives for movement classification". Autonomous Robots. 12: 39–54. doi:10.1023/A:1013254724861. S2CID8566242.
Jenkins, Odest Chadwicke (July 4, 2004). "A spatio-temporal extension to Isomap nonlinear dimension reduction". Twenty-first international conference on Machine learning - ICML '04. pp. 39–54. doi:10.1145/1015330.1015357. ISBN978-1-58113-838-2. S2CID1323352.
Grollman, Daniel H.; Jenkins, Odest Chadwicke (April 10, 2007). "Dogged Learning for Robots". Proceedings 2007 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation. pp. 2483–2488. doi:10.1109/ROBOT.2007.363692. ISBN978-1-4244-0602-9. S2CID8905292.