Seminars & Colloquia
Michael Kearns
Computer and Information Science, University of Pennsylvania
"Behavioral Graph Coloring **CANCELLED**"
Monday April 24, 2006 04:00 PM
Location: 136, MRC NCSU Centennial Campus
(Visitor parking instructions)
This talk is part of the Triangle Computer Science Distinguished Lecturer Series
In this talk, I will describe the preliminary but thought-provoking findings of a series of behavioral experiments we have been performing at Penn. Human subjects attempt to perform distributed graph coloring using a system that controls network structure, information conditions, incentives, and a variety of other variables of interest. The experiments shed early light on whether such problems can be solved by human networks, under what conditions, and what algorithms they seem to adopt.
I am also the head of quantitative strategy development in the Equity Strategies department of Lehman Brothers in New York City. (Please send any Lehman-related email to mkearns@lehman.com.)
At Penn, I am the co-director (with Linguistics professor Mark Liberman) of Penn's interdisciplinary Institute for Research in Cognitive Science. I also have a secondary appointment in the Operations and Information Management (OPIM) department of the Wharton School. In 2001, I took a brief sabbatical from pure research as Chief Technology Officer of Syntek Capital.
I spent the decade 1991-2001 in basic AI and machine learning research at AT&T Labs and Bell Labs. During my last four years there, I was the head of the AI department, which conducted a broad range of systems and foundational AI work. During my time at AT&T/Bell Labs, I also served as the head of the Machine Learning department, and as the head of the Secure Systems Research department.
I joined the Penn faculty in January 2002.
Host: Sayan Mukherjee, Computer Science, Duke U.