Case Study
Tuesday, July 01
04:00 PM - 04:30 PM
Live in San Francisco
Less Details
The pursuit of Earth-independent spaceflight demands safe, intelligent systems capable of autonomous decision-making far from ground control. This presentation explores how decades of spaceflight experience—especially current efforts to enable human missions beyond low-Earth orbit—offer valuable insights for the autonomous vehicle industry. By examining advanced onboard intelligence, resilient sensor fusion, and real-time safety protocols developed for deep-space missions, we’ll highlight key strategies for building fail-operational systems. The talk connects the challenges of human space exploration with those of safe autonomous driving, emphasizing the need for robust autonomy when real-time external guidance is limited or unavailable.
In this presentation, you will learn
Dr. Alonso Vera is the NASA Senior Scientist (ST) for Distributed Collaborative Systems. He has worked at NASA since 2000 and served as chief of the Human Systems Integration Division from 2010-23. Dr. Vera has cross-disciplinary expertise in human performance, human-computer interaction and artificial intelligence. He has led the development of software systems across NASA robotic and human space flight missions including Mars Exploration Rovers, Phoenix Mars Lander, Mars Science Laboratory, Space Shuttle, International Space Station, and Exploration Systems. Dr. Vera received a Bachelor of Science from McGill University, a Ph.D. from Cornell University and a Post-Doctoral Fellowship in Artificial Intelligence at the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University.