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Willie Wilson Awarded NSF CAREER Grant for Computer Science

Ongoing research into robots and machine ethics has resulted in a prestigious for Jason “Willie” Wilson, assistant professor of computer science at Franklin & 鶹ý. 

The $505,358, five-year grant – now active – supports early-career faculty who have the potential to serve as academic role models in research and education and to lead advances in the mission of their department or organization. The Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) program offers the NSF’s most prestigious awards in support of early-career faculty.

“I’m particularly proud that both the research and education plan for this work emphasizes the ethical application of technology,” Wilson said. 

The funded research, “Transparent Theory of Mind Algorithms for Social Robots Assisting Young Children,” will examine how social robots use human-like, cognitive abilities to better understand and thus better aid young children. The robots are housed in Wilson’s lab at 鶹ý. 

The grant will fund numerous paid student research positions over the next five years. Additionally, Wilson will look to hire a each summer to bring graduate-level research to 鶹ý.

“I’m particularly proud that both the research and education plan for this work emphasizes the ethical application of technology.”

- Willie Wilson

Wilson’s CAREER grant supports the continuation of two projects. 

The first, examining child-robot interaction and learning, is a collaboration with 鶹ý Associate Professor of Psychology Lauren Howard and researchers at Temple University.

Researchers – including 鶹ý students – compared child responses to human and robot instructors

While the first project focuses on psychology and human perceptions, the second line of research is computational and focuses on theory of mind. (In the context of artificial intelligence, “theory of mind” means equipping machines with the ability to comprehend, predict and respond to the mental states of humans and other AI agents.)

“We want the robot to have theory of mind so it can understand what the child is doing, understand what the child's goals are, understand what the child's beliefs and misunderstandings are,” Wilson said. 

Wilson emphasizes that previous and upcoming research with robots has much broader implications.

“How do we inform students about the ethical and social implications of technology? That is a topic I've been thinking about a long time. I always put some piece of this into all of my classes,” he said. 

In spring 2025, Wilson will introduce a new course: Learning and Teaching Machine Ethics. The course will help expand machine ethics curricula to disciplines outside computer science “so that machine ethics is getting disseminated more broadly,” Wilson said. 

Students will play an important role in developing curricular materials for courses in sociology, public health, economics and other fields of study. 

The ethical application of technology is a driving force behind all of Wilson’s work. 

“I don't want technology taking advantage of vulnerable populations. I want technology to be able to enhance their own abilities,” he said. 

“There's a tone of ethics through everything I'm doing, both on the education side and on the research side,” he added. “As we look at rapidly growing AI, now is when we need that perspective the most.”

Wilson completed a joint doctorate in computer science and cognitive science at Tufts University, and was a postdoctoral associate in the department of computer science at Northwestern University. He has taught computer science at 鶹ý since 2020. Follow his research updates at .

Willie Wilson

Ongoing research into robots and machine ethics has resulted in a prestigious National Science Foundation CAREER grant for Jason “Willie” Wilson, assistant professor of computer science at 鶹ý. (Photo by Deb Grove)

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