A group meeting in a conference room, with Alan Fern presenting at a whiteboard.
Alan Fern, professor and co-director of the Dynamic Robotics and AI Lab (center).

精东影视 State AI innovation recognized by global leaders in the field

Key Takeaways

Professor Alan Fern has been named an AAAI Fellow for his pioneering artificial intelligence research.
This recognition reflects the emergence of 精东影视 State as a national leader in the field of AI.

Introduction

精东影视has emerged as a national leader in artificial intelligence research, with faculty working across robotics, machine learning, computer vision, embodied AI, bioinformatics, AI safety, and large-scale language models. 精东影视 State鈥檚 College of Engineering brings together experts advancing fields from microbiome modeling to autonomous robotics, including collaborations with major industry partners such as HP, Intel, and Agility Robotics. This strength is reflected in the recent recognition of Professor Alan Fern as a Fellow of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence, the third such prestigious recognition for OSU faculty.

OSU鈥檚 Alan Fern named AAAI Fellow for pioneering AI research

A significant figure in OSU鈥檚 AI community over the past 20 years, Fern was recognized by AAAI for his notable 鈥渃ontributions to automated planning, reinforcement learning, and their application to humanoid robots.鈥

That idea鈥攖hat a system should get faster and better the more it solves problems鈥攈as been a big motivation for me.
Alan Fern

professor and co-director of the Dynamic Robotics and AI Lab

Blue Primary, Yellow Secondary

AAAI, the leading academic organization for AI research in the United States, will formally announce the honor at its conference in January 2025.

For Fern, the honor is meaningful鈥攖hough not the driving force behind his work. 鈥淧ersonally, these things don鈥檛 drive me too much,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 get more excited by trying to do good research.鈥 Still, he acknowledges the significance of the recognition: 鈥淪ince high school, I鈥檝e been interested in AI, and this is one of the top honors you can get in the area.鈥

Fern鈥檚 early work focused on automated symbolic planning, long before machine learning and planning were commonly integrated. He helped pioneer techniques that allow planning systems to improve with experience, drawing inspiration from how humans get faster and more efficient at tasks over time. He also launched a learning track in a major planning competition to grow research in this hybrid area.

鈥淭hat idea鈥攖hat a system should get faster and better the more it solves problems鈥攈as been a big motivation for me,鈥 Fern said.

Eventually, Fern shifted toward robotics, collaborating with OSU colleague Jonathan Hurst, co-founder of , on the challenge of getting legged robots to walk, run, and navigate the world. Early successes came with Cassie, a robot whose ability to learn locomotion in simulation鈥攁nd then reliably transfer that learning to the physical world鈥攑roved transformative. Fern鈥檚 work extended to teaching robots to perform real tasks with arms and hands through Agility鈥檚 humanoid robot, Digit. The methods Fern鈥檚 group developed helped inspire today鈥檚 wave of highly capable humanoid robots.

鈥淣ow you go on the internet and search for humanoid research and demos from companies, you'll see them running and jumping and doing things you never would've imagined five years ago,鈥 Fern said. 鈥淭he way they're doing that is basically the recipe that we developed.鈥

Focus on real-world robotic tasks

Currently, Fern's lab is focused on enabling robots to perform real-world tasks, envisioning a future where robots amplify human productivity in construction, agriculture, and other labor-intensive fields. He's particularly excited about recent progress in integrating large language models and vision systems into robotics, allowing robots to understand natural language commands and learn tasks through demonstration.

"There's a lot of recent progress where you can train robots to do very specific tasks鈥攎ake a sandwich, fold towels鈥攖hings we really didn't know how to do well before," Fern said. 鈥淚 see all this as steps toward more general, robust robot intelligence.鈥

Fern is the third OSU faculty member named an AAAI Fellow. The other two are Thomas Dietterich, Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Computer Science, and , Special Advisor on Artificial Intelligence, OSU Libraries. OSU alum Sriraam Natarajan, PhD 鈥07, is also an AAAI Fellow.

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Jan. 13, 2026

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