Computer science theory group at the University of Colorado Boulder https://www.colorado.edu/cs-theory/
Theoretical Computer Science professor @ U. of Michigan-Ann Arbor.
Opinions are mine and may evolve over time.
repost β endorsement.
Policy: I don't interact with anonymous profiles.
Join AAUP.
he/him/his.
KΔnaka maoli & Black. Mathematician. Usually tired (not sleepy). Forever dreaming of home (Moku o Keawe).
Postdoc @harvard.edu @kempnerinstitute.bsky.social
Homepage: http://satpreetsingh.github.io
Twitter: https://x.com/tweetsatpreet
Assistant prof at JHU CS. Interested in theory of ML, privacy, cryptography. All cat pictures my own and do not represent the cats of my employer
Computer science, math, machine learning, (differential) privacy
Researcher at Google DeepMind
Kiwiπ³πΏ in CaliforniaπΊπΈ
http://stein.ke/
Cryptographer (lattices/post-quantum), Professor at U-Michigan Computer Science and Engineering , Head of Cryptography Research at Algorand, PhD from MIT CSAIL. Previously faculty at Georgia Tech School of CS. Here I speak for myself.
professor of EECS at MIT, currently visiting IAS. working in theoretical computer science namely algorithm design, complexity theory, circuit complexity, etc.
i'll let you know when P != NP is proved (and when it's not)
Algorithms for Toddlers (https://youtu.be/nnLOi3ia210) | Algorithms for Teenagers (https://tinyurl.com/2cnp39cf) | Algorithms for Grown Ups (http://dblp.org/pid/11/10308)
Professor of computer science at Boston University. Not related to any economists, living or dead, as far as I know.
Professor at Penn, Amazon Scholar at AWS. Interested in machine learning, uncertainty quantification, game theory, privacy, fairness, and most of the intersections therein
Associate Professor of Computer Science at Northeastern University in Boston. Dad. Imposter.
Mathematics and science journalist. My work has appeared in Quanta, Nature, The Atlantic, New Scientist, Science News and other publications.
Illuminating math and science. Supported by the Simons Foundation. 2022 Pulitzer Prize in Explanatory Reporting. www.quantamagazine.org