Colfax-Mingo alum targets machine 
learning at Cambridge

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To the every day homeowner, folding towels may seem an uncomplicated if not tedious task, but to 22-year-old Colfax-Mingo alum Colorado Reed it represents his future.

“It’s a new industry right there in a robot,” Reed said. “Folding socks, you’re looking at hundreds of equations.”

The Youtube video featuring UC Berkeley’s PR2 robot folding laundry has gone viral and has nearly 1 million views. But it’s the algorithms that make up the unit’s artificial intelligence (AI) that fascinates Reed. The University of Iowa senior graduating in applied physics explains that the science of machine learning is what makes it all possible, and it is his research on the subject that has earned Reed a high honor.

Reed has recently been named one of 14 college students nationwide to be made a Churchill Scholar. This prestigious honor gives the local alum the opportunity to study at the University of Cambridge in England for one year. Not only is it one of the oldest universities in the world, but Cambridge is also one of the top research institutions internationally. In a phone interview from Iowa City Wednesday, Reed said he will be studying under Professor Zedoubin Ghahramani, who is responsible for the mathematical muster behind research leading to intuitive smart phone apps, targeted marketing devices and the latest Apple Inc. product to enter the pop culture lexicon, the personal assistant Siri.

“He is responsible for the Bayesian Revolution,” Reed said. “Over the past 20 years he has more or less been a leader in statistical algorithms and artificial intelligence. There is a decades gap between the research and the industry, but machine learning is going to be an incredible part of peoples’ lives.”

Machine learning technology can be seen everywhere. It is seen when a shopper gets a targeted coupon at a Walmart or Target checkout, and it’s calculations are visible in suggested advertisements that pop-up after a web user’s latest Google search. Reed said it’s these algorithms, which isolate people’s behavioral patterns and habits, that make it all possible. At Cambridge, the former Colfax resident hopes to help continue that research and see how far the AI can go.

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