Matthew A Turk Editor

Md Atiqur Rahman Ahad, Ph.D. (SMIEEE, SMOPTICA) is a Professor of AI, University of East London, Visiting Professor of Kyushu Institute of Technology, Japan; Aoyama Gakuin University, Japan; and UCSI University, Malaysia. He works on AI on healthcare (AMR, PD, well-being, rehabilitation), AI & cyber safety, etc. He studied at KyuTech (Ph.D.), UNSW (MCompSc), and DU (BSc(Honors), MSc). He has received 60 awards/recognitions. Dr. Ahad acquired grants UKRI, NIHR, STMicroelectronics, OfS, etc. He has also published 16 books, 210+ peer-reviewed papers and book chapters. Dr Ahad was invited as keynote/invited speaker 170+ times at different conferences/universities. He has/had over 145 Ph.D. and other researchers as supervisor/co-supervisor. He is an Associate Editor, Pattern Recognition, Editorial Board Member, Scientific Reports, Nature; General Chair: Int. Joint Conf. on Biometrics (IJCB2025). More info: http://ahadVisionLab.com

Anton Nijholt is interested in non-traditional human-computer interaction issues. These issues include irrational behavior, deception, food, and humor. They are included in research on entertainment computing, augmented reality, brain-computer interfacing, multimodal interaction, affective interaction, and modelling interactions in smart environments, including human-human interaction, human-robot interaction, human-virtual agent interaction, and playable cities.

He has been program chair or general chair of the main international conferences of affective computing (ACII), entertainment computing (ACE, INTETAIN, ICEC), virtual agents (IVA), faces & gestures (FG), and some others. He organised many workshops on related topics, such as multisensorial augmented reality, humor engineering, human-food interaction, playable cities, and brain-computer interfacing. Recent edited books are Playable Cities: The City as a Digital Playground, Making Smart Cities more Playable, and Brain Art: Brain-Computer Interfaces for Artistic Expression.

Nijholt held positions at various universities in Belgium and the Netherlands. He acted as supervisor for about fifty Ph.D. students. During some years Nijholt was scientific advisor of Philips Research, Eindhoven. He has been research-fellow at McMaster University (Canada), the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities and Social Sciences, the Imagineering Institute in Malaysia, and member of Microsoft’s Technical Leadership Advisory Board. Nijholt is Chief Editor of the section "Human-Media Interaction" of Frontiers in Psychology and Frontiers in Computer Science, series editor of Gaming Media and Social Effects, and a member of many editorial boards.

Md Abdus Samad Kamal is working at the Cluster of Electronics and Mechanical Engineering, Graduate School of Science and Technology Gunma University, Japan. His details are in https://www.mst.st.gunmau.ac.jp/kamal/biog.html.

Björn Schuller received his diploma, doctoral degree, and habilitation in Machine Intelligence and Signal Processing in EE/IT from Technical University of Munich. He is Full Professor of Artificial Intelligence and the Head of the Group on Language, Audio, & Music (GLAM) at Imperial College London/UK, Full Professor and Chair of Embedded Intelligence for Health Care and Wellbeing at the University of Augsburg/Germany, co-founding CEO and current CSO of audEERING – an audio intelligence company based near Munich and in Berlin, and permanent Visiting Professor at Harbin Institute of Technology/China amongst other professorships and affiliations. Previous stays include Full Professor at the University of Passau/Germany, Key Researcher at Joanneum Research in Graz/Austria, and the CNRS-LIMSI in Orsay/France. He is a Fellow of the IEEE and Golden Core Awardee of the IEEE Computer Society, Fellow of the BCS, Fellow of the ISCA, Fellow and President- Emeritus of the AAAC, and Senior Member of the ACM. He (co-)authored 1,000+ publications (40k+ citations, h-index=100+), is Field Chief Editor of Frontiers in Digital Health and was Editor-in-Chief of the IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing amongst manifold further commitments and service to the community. His 40+ awards include having been honoured as one of 40 extraordinary scientists under the age of 40 by the World Economic Forum in 2015. He has initiated and organized first-in-the-field of affective computing and sentiment analysis challenges such as AVEC, ComParE, or MuSe more than 30 times. He is an ERC Starting and DFG Reinhart-Koselleck Grantee, and consultant of companies such as Barclays, GN, Huawei, Informatics, and Samsung.

Matthew A. Turk is the third President of Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago. He earned a Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, an MS from Carnegie Mellon University, and a BS from Virginia Tech. Prior to joining TTIC in 2019, Turk was a full professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he continues as Professor Emeritus. His primary appointment was in the Department of Computer Science, where he served as Department Chair from 2017 to 2019, with a secondary appointment in Media Arts and Technology, where he served as Chair from 2005 to 2010. He also had affiliate appointments in Electrical and Computer Engineering and the Dynamical Neuroscience Program and was involved in several interdisciplinary organizations across campus.

Turk’s primary research interests are in computer vision and machine learning, augmented and mixed reality, and human-computer interaction. He has received several best paper awards and has been general or program chair of several major conferences, including CVPR, WACV, ACM Multimedia, IEEE Face and Gesture Recognition, and International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (ICMI).

He brings a dynamic background of academic, industry, and entrepreneurial experience to the role of President. In 2000, Turk helped to found the Vision Technology Group at Microsoft Research, and he brings additional industry experience gained in working with a small Silicon Valley company and a large aerospace company. In 2014, he co-founded a startup company that spun out from NSF-funded research in his lab and was acquired in 2016. He is a Fellow of the ACM, the IEEE, and the IAPR and was the Fulbright-Nokia Distinguished Chair in Information and Communications Technologies.