Professor Filippo Menczer
Filippo
Menczer, Ph.D. is
Associate Professor of Informatics and Computer Science and the
Associate Director of the Center for Complex Networks and Systems
Research at the Indiana University School of Informatics and Computing.
He also has courtesy appointments in Cognitive Science and Physics, and
is affiliated with the Center for Data and Search Informatics, the
Center for Security Informatics, and the Biocomplexity Institute.
Finally he is a Fellow-at-large of the Santa Fe Institute and
the Lagrange Senior Fellow at the ISI Foundation’s
Complex
Networks Lab in Torino, Italy.
Research in his group,
NaN, focuses on web science, web search and data
mining, social web applications, distributed and intelligent web
information systems, and modeling of complex information networks.
Fil authored
ARACHNID: Adaptive retrieval agents choosing heuristic neighborhoods
for
information discovery and
Complementing search engines with online web mining agents,
and
coauthored
Evaluating Topic-Driven
Web Crawlers,
Adaptive Retrieval Agents: Internalizing Local
Context and Scaling up to the Web,
Social Phishing,
Feature Selection in Unsupervised Learning via
Evolutionary Search,
Topical web crawlers: Evaluating adaptive algorithms, and
Algorithmic detection of semantic similarity.
Fil also recently coauthored
A First Course in Network Science. Networks are everywhere: networks of friends, transportation networks and the Web. Neurons in our brains and proteins within our bodies form
networks that determine our intelligence and survival. This modern, accessible textbook introduces the basics of network science for a wide
range of job sectors from management to marketing, from biology to engineering, and from neuroscience to the social sciences.
Fil earned his Laurea in Physics at the Sapienza University of Rome in
1990.
He was research fellow in the Artificial Life Lab, Institute of
Cognitive
Sciences and Technologies, National Research Council, Rome from 1989
to 1991.
Fil earned his M.S. in Computer Science at U.C. San Diego in 1994 and
his
Ph.D. in Computer Science and Cognitive Science with the thesis
“Life-like Agents: Internalizing Local Cues for Reinforcement Learning
and Evolution”
at
U.C. San Diego (AI Lab) in 1998.
He has been the recipient of Fulbright, Rotary Foundation, and
NATO fellowships, and a Career Award from the National Science
Foundation.
Read
Truthy.indiana.edu to search, identify smear tactics, Twitter-bombs
through election runup and
Phishers can use social Web sites as bait to net victims.
Watch
Social Web Search.
Read his
LinkedIn profile.