
Creates a positive and motivating atmosphere.
Andrew Campbell is the Albert Bradley 1915 Third Century Professor of Computer Science at Dartmouth College. His research focuses on mobile sensing using smartphones and wearables, AI interventions, and technologies to assess and manage mental illnesses including anxiety, depression, and schizophrenia at population scale. He co-directs the HealthX Lab, co-leads Emerging Technologies and Data Analytics at the Center for Technology and Behavioral Health, and contributes to the NSF AI Research Institute on Interaction for AI Assistants and the Evergreen Project, which integrates behavioral sensing for student well-being.
Prior to Dartmouth, Campbell was a Tenured Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering at Columbia University following a decade on the tenure track. He spent ten years in industry developing wireless packet networks and operating systems and served as a Research Scientist at Google from 2016 to 2018 in the Android Wearables group and Verily, working on cardiovascular and mental health sensing. He has held visiting professor positions at CMU Rwanda, University of Salamanca, University College London, and University of Cambridge. Campbell has earned major awards including the ACM UbiComp 10-Year Impact Award in 2024 for StudentLife (2014), 2022 for StressSense (2012), ACM SIGMOBILE Test of Time Paper Award in 2019, and ACM SenSys Test of Time Paper Award in 2018, both for CenceMe (2008). In 2025, he received the Dean of the Faculty Award for Outstanding Mentoring and Advising. With over 450 publications, standout works include "A survey of mobile phone sensing" (2010), StudentLife: assessing mental health, academic performance and behavioral trends of college students using smartphones (2014), and CenceMe (2008). His research has attracted $42 million in grants from NSF, NIH, and industry, pioneering passive sensing for mental health via projects like StudentLife, which tracked 200 Dartmouth students over four years.