Kristen Brent Venable
Tulane University, Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition
Papers
2
Total Citations
62
H-Index
2
About
Kristen Brent Venable is a leading researcher in artificial intelligence, multi-agent systems, and computational ethics. Her work lies at the critical intersection of autonomous systems and human-centered decision-making, addressing how machines can act ethically and cooperatively alongside humans in high-stakes environments. Venable’s most cited paper, “Embedding Ethical Principles in Collective Decision Support Systems” (2016, 60 citations), lays foundational groundwork for integrating moral reasoning into autonomous technologies like self-driving cars, medical diagnosis tools, and assistive robots. This work has proven influential in shaping discussions around AI ethics and value alignment. More recently, her 2024 paper on “Distributed Autonomous Swarm Formation for Dynamic Network Bridging” explores how robotic swarms can coordinate in real-time for disaster response—demonstrating her continued focus on practical, cooperative autonomy. Venable’s contributions are notable for bridging theoretical ethics with deployable multi-agent systems, making her research essential reading for students and scholars working on responsible AI, swarm robotics, and human-machine collaboration. Her work consistently emphasizes that future autonomous systems must not only be intelligent, but also principled and trustworthy.
Research Focus
Key Achievements
Top Papers
- 1Embedding Ethical Principles in Collective Decision Support Systems60 citations · 2016
- 2Distributed Autonomous Swarm Formation for Dynamic Network Bridging2 citations · 2024