Kim Binsted


Kim Binsted is a professor in the Information and Computer Sciences Department at the University of Hawaii. Binsted's work explores artificial intelligence, human-computer interfaces, and long-duration human space exploration.

Biography

Binsted completed her B.Sc. in Physics at McGill University in 1991. During her time at McGill she was a founding member of Montreal's On The Spot improv comedy troupe.
Her Ph.D. in Artificial Intelligence was received from the University of Edinburgh in 1996. During her time at the University of Edinburgh she performed in what is now the Edinburgh Fringe's longest running improvised comedy troupe, The Improverts.
Between 1997 and 1999, Binsted worked as an Associate Researcher at Sony's Computer Science Laboratories in Tokyo on human-computer interfaces.
During the summer of 2003 and 2004 Binsted was a NASA Summer Faculty Fellow at Ames Research Center in the Neuroengineering Lab where she the worked on sub-vocal speech recognition technology. She held the post of Chief Scientist on the FMARS 2007 Long Duration Mission, which entailed a four-month Mars exploration analogue on Devon Island in the Canadian High Arctic. On sabbatical during 2009 Binsted visited scientists at the Canadian Space Agency to work on the CSA's planetary analogues program. From 2002 to 2014 she was a team member at the UH-NASA Astrobiology Institute.
In 2017, she was one of seventy-two applicants to become a Canadian astronaut. She was unsuccessful.
Binsted is the principal investigator on HI-SEAS.