Trevor Darrell
Research Areas
Teaching Schedule
Spring 2025
- CS 294-194. From Research to Startup, We 17:00-18:29, Soda 320
Fall 2025
- CS 294-43. Large Scale Vision and Language Models, Mo 15:00-16:59,
Biography
Professor Darrell is on the faculty of the CS Division at UC Berkeley. His group develops algorithms to enable visual recognition across a variety of platforms and applications. His interests include computer vision, machine learning, computer graphics, and perception-based human computer interfaces. Prof. Darrell was on the faculty of the MIT EECS department from 1999-2008, where he directed the Vision Interface Group. He was a member of the research staff at Interval Research Corporation from 1996-1999, and received the S.M. and Ph.D. degrees from MIT in 1992 and 1996, respectively. He obtained the B.S.E. degree from the University of Pennsylvania in 1988, having started his career in computer vision as an undergraduate researcher in Ruzena Bajcsy’s GRASP lab.
Education
- 1996, PhD, MAS, MIT
- 1988, BSE, CS, U.Penn.
Selected Publications
- S. Karayev, M. Fritz, and T. Darrell, "Dynamic Feature Selection for Classification on a Budget," in ICML-W, 2013.
- S. Karayev, T. Baumgartner, M. Fritz, and T. Darrell, "Timely Object Recognition," in NIPS, 2012.
- J. Hoffman, B. Kulis, T. Darrell, and K. Saenko, "Discovering Latent Domains for Multisource Domain Adaptation," in European Conference Computer Vision (ECCV), T. Darrell, Ed., 2012.