Dr Kevin Montgomery is the CEO and co-founder of IoT/AI - a new start-up pioneering sensor and IoT technologies with AI in the military, industrial, and health markets. He remains Founder of Collaborate.org for non-profit applications.Previously, he was a Senior Researcher at the Center for Innovation in Global Health at Stanford University and Director of the National Biocomputation Center (a Stanford/NASA center to develop advanced technologies for next-generation medicine- computer-based surgical planning, augmented reality surgery, surgical simulators, anatomical atlases, and wireless telemedicine).In addition to his work at Stanford, Dr Montgomery was a Portfolio Manager for TATRC (US Army MRMC) where he oversaw a $26M portfolio of advanced R&D projects. He regularly serves on review sections for NIH, NSF, DoD, and other granting agencies, serves on the program committees of several technical conferences, and advises and consults with several small, high-tech companies in the Silicon Valley. Before joining Stanford, he led teams at the NASA Ames Research Center for biomedical imaging for space-related research. While at NASA, he developed and demonstrated the first live transmission of vital signs and video from a commercial aircraft. Prior to joining NASA, he was a project leader at the Hewlett-Packard Company focusing on networking protocol design and AI applied to microbiology.He is also an Adjunct Associate Professor of Research at the University of Texas Health Sciences Center- Houston and the University of Hawaii. He has over 28 years of full-time technical experience in industry, government, and academia, 25 years of management experience, and over 76 peer-reviewed journal and conference publications.Dr Montgomery received the Entrepreneur of the Year Award from the Strategic News Service in 2013 and the Edison Innovation Award in 2015. He also received a Smithsonian Award for his pioneering work in aircraft telemedicine in 1998.
Listed skills include Research, Strategy, Program Management, Medical Imaging, and 42 others.