Milind Tambe

Milind Tambe is an Indian-American educator serving as a Professor of Computer Science at Harvard University. He also serves as the director of the Center for Research on Computation and Society at Harvard University and the director of "AI for Social Good" at Google Research India.

Fellowships and awards
Tambe is a fellow of AAAI (Association for Advancement of Artificial Intelligence), as well as ACM (Association for Computing Machinery). He is also a recipient of the IJCAI John McCarthy Award, as well as the ACM SIGART Autonomous Agents Research Award. Additionally, he has been recognized by the AAAI (Association for Advancement of Artificial Intelligence)'s Robert S. Engelmore Memorial Lecture Award and the Christopher Columbus Fellowship Foundation Homeland Security Award. He has also received the Distinguished Alumnus Award from Birla Institute of Technology and Science (BITS).

Previous Positions
Previous to his position at Harvard and Google, he was Helen N. and Emmett H. Jones, Professor of Engineering and a Professor of Computer Science and Industrial and Systems Engineering at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles.

Research
Tambe's work focuses on advancing AI and multi-agent systems for public health, conservation and public safety, with a track record of building pioneering AI systems for social impact. His research focuses on fundamental problems in computational game theory, machine learning, automated planning, intelligent agents, and multi-agent interactions that are driven by these topics, ensuring a virtuous cycle of research and real-world applications. This research has led to significant practical impact, such as the use of the green security games framework to assist wildlife conservation around the world, the use of social networks and machine learning to assist in improving public health outcomes such as HIV prevention, and the use of pioneering security games research for security optimization by agencies, such as the US Coast Guard and the Federal Air Marshals Service.

In terms of public safety and security, the security games framework that Professor Tambe pioneered has been deployed and tested for security optimization, both nationally and internationally, by agencies such as the US Coast Guard and the Federal Air Marshals Service. More specifically, Professor Tambe and team provided the first-ever applications of computational game theory for operational security. The first of these deployments was the ARMOR system of game-theoretic algorithms for security (e.g., counter-terrorism) which started operating at the Los Angeles LAX airport in 2007, deployed by the LAX police division. This work was followed by pioneering deployments of security games for major security agencies such as the Federal Air Marshals Service, the US Coast Guard and the Transportation Security Administration. This research is credited with more than $100 million in savings to US agencies.

In terms of AI for conservation, Tambe and team were the first to apply AI models, specifically machine learning and game theory, for global scale anti-poaching efforts, as part of the PAWS project for wildlife conservation. The PAWS AI system has been deployed in collaboration with wildlife conservation agencies to assist rangers around the world. PAWS has helped rangers in removing 10s of 1000s of traps used to kill endangered wildlife in national parks in countries such Cambodia and Uganda. Furthermore, PAWS is integrated with the SMART software, making PAWS available for use at 100s of national parks around the globe.

Tambe and his team also provided the first large scale applications of social network algorithms for public health. For example, in a recently completed study with 700 youth experiencing homelessness, Tambe and team's algorithms led to a significant reduction in HIV risk behaviors compared to traditional approaches. Other examples include research in collaboration with NGOs for improving maternal health care outcomes, TB prevention and others.