Greetings!
I am an Assistant Professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of New Hampshire. Before joining UNH in 2007, I managed the Embedded Reasoning Area and was a member of the research staff at the Palo Alto Research Center (formerly Xerox PARC). I received my PhD from Harvard University in 2002. A full CV is available here, although it is likely not current.
Many of my papers are available on-line. Please help yourself!
I'm always happy to collaborate with people inside and outside of UNH on topics involving my research interests. Just send me email to set up a time to talk. If you are at UNH, you might want to check out the UNH AI Group wiki and join the group.
If you are considering applying to UNH for graduate school or an internship, please consult my information for prospective students.
David Furcy, Sven Koenig, Rong Zhou, and I are organizing the First International Symposium on Search Techniques in Artificial Intelligence and Robotics (STAIR-08), to be held just before AAAI-08 in Chicago. Check it out!
Ian Miguel and I organized the Seventh International Symposium on Abstraction, Reformulation, and Approximation (SARA-07).
Frank Hutter and I organized the AAAI-06 Workshop on Learning for Search.
Spring 2008: CS 595 Computer Science Seminar
and CS 730/730W/830 Introduction to Artificial Intelligence
(website).
Fall 2007: CS 595 Computer Science Seminar.
If you're on campus, my office is Kingsbury W233. My office hours for Spring 2008 are Tuesdays 3:30-4:30pm or by appointment.
If you're not on campus but wish you were, this webcam captures a tiny corner of UNH. (Here's another UNH webcam and a nearby UNH weather observing station.)
In the distant past, I toyed with the idea of having a separate personal web page.
My last name is pronounced `RUM-uhl' (rhymes with `pummel').