Carol Reiley

"mother of robots" Founder DeepMusic.ai, World Economics Young Global Leader, Founder Drive.ai (acquired by Apple)

Carol is an engineering entrepreneur, AI roboticist, and executive. She is on the board of, advising, and/or investing in several companies ranging from AI, healthcare, and diversity. Affectionately nicknamed Mother of Robots, she’s named one of the “World’s 50 Most Renowned Women in Robotics” by Analyst Insight, “Top 50 Women in Tech” by Forbes and “Most Influential Women in Tech” by Inc Magazine and Quartz.

She has been working in robotics and AI for over 20 years and was the youngest member elected on the IEEE Robotics and Automation board. She previously worked at Intuitive Surgical, Lockheed Martin, General Electric, and Drive.ai where she developed highly regulated products in a variety of different applications such as space, underwater, medical and self-driving vehicles. She founded and is CEO of a new healthcare tech company and deepmusic.ai (AI+Creativity). She is currently a Creative Collaborator of the San Francisco symphony, on the technical advisory board of Harman Kardon, World Economics Forum Young Global Leader, and a brand spokesperson for Guerlain Cosmetics. Her work has been featured in WSJ, NY Times, MIT Tech Review, Vogue, Harpers Bazaar, Wired, etc. Carol is recognized as one of Forbes, Inc, and Quartz’s most powerful founders lists for her work in Artificial Intelligence.

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Carol co-founded, invested, and is on the board/advisor of self-driving car startup drive.ai. As President, she led company strategy, helped build team of 8 to 200+ employees, and raised over $77M, building partnerships with Lyft, Grab, governments and automotive companies.

She did her graduate work at Johns Hopkins University as an NSF Fellow researching how humans and robots interact. She currently holds over eight patents, published over a dozen academic papers in top conferences, and a highly sought after speaker. She has given many keynote speeches to large corporations, the United Nations, and guest lectured at top universities. She founded Tinkerbelle labs (low cost DIY open source projects) and Squishybots (educational robotics for children and a children’s book author). She is an advocate for underrepresented groups in technology and have spoken out about the Bias in AI. She has educated over 10,000 young entrepreneurs on AI, the future of work and entrepreneurship. She was the first female engineer on the cover of MAKE magazine.