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Contact information: USC Information Sciences Institute 4676 Admiralty Way Marina del Rey, CA 90292 tel: (310) 448-8714 fax:(310) 822-0751 |
I am a research assistant professor at the University of Southern California's Computer Science Department and a project leader at the USC Information Sciences Institute. The road to CS has not been linear for me. I received a Ph.D. in physics from University of California at Santa Barbara, where I studied pattern formation in binary fluid convection. After a two year interlude in the software industry, I returned to academia as a computer scientist. My research interests are focused on two different topics: mathematical modeling of multi-agent systems and machine learning methods for information extraction and analysis.
Our current research focuses on design and analysis of more complex agents, including humans. We are developing a methodology for designing multi-robot systems that uses techniques from machine learning (grammar induction) to automatically synthesize robot's behavior rules from the specifications produced by the robot's designer. Once we have the behavior rules, we can invoke the previously developed framework to predict and optimize collective behavior of a group of robots executing the same rules.
We are also extending our formal framework to agents that learn, adapt or interact with neighbors. Human beings display such complex behaviors. In one project, we are studying crowd dynamics in a museum setting. Together with collaborators at USC and Brandeis, we are modeling collective behavior of museum visitors and validate these models experimentally by recording actual museum visitors at the California Science Center in downtown Los Angeles. In another project, we are studying dynamics of social networks found on the recently proliferating social media sites. The label ``social media'' describes Web sites whose content is driven primarily by users: e.g., blogs, MySpace, del.icio.us, Wikipedia. The recent rise of social media sites underscores a transformation of the Web from a passive searchable medium to one in which users are actively creating, evaluating and distributing information. Social media sites allow us to methodologically study collective self-organization in humans, specifically, how users collaboratively evaluate information quality.