Nicole Immorlica
Nicole Immorlica (born November 26, 1978)[1] is a theoretical computer scientist at Microsoft Research, known for her work on algorithmic game theory and locality-sensitive hashing.
Education and career
[edit]Immorlica completed her Ph.D. in 2005 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, under the joint supervision of David Karger and Erik Demaine. Her dissertation was Computing with Strategic Agents.[2]
After postdoctoral research at Microsoft Research and at the Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica in Amsterdam, Immorlica took a faculty position at Northwestern University in 2008, and moved to Microsoft Research in 2012.[3]
Service
[edit]In 2019, Immorlica was elected chair of SIGecom, the Association for Computing Machinery Special Interest Group on Economics and Computation.[4]
Recognition
[edit]Immorlica was named as an ACM Fellow, in the 2023 class of fellows, for "contributions to economics and computation, including market design, auctions and social networks".[5]
References
[edit]- ^ About Nicole Immorlica, retrieved 2020-05-20
- ^ Nicole Immorlica at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ^ Nicole Immorlica: Senior Principal Researcher, Microsoft Research, retrieved 2020-05-20
- ^ "Nicole Immorlica", People of ACM, Association for Computing Machinery, July 2, 2019
- ^ "Nicole Immorlica", Award recipients, Association for Computing Machinery, retrieved 2024-01-24
External links
[edit]- Home page
- Nicole Immorlica publications indexed by Google Scholar
- 1978 births
- Living people
- American computer scientists
- American women computer scientists
- Theoretical computer scientists
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni
- Northwestern University faculty
- Microsoft Research people
- American women academics
- 21st-century American women
- 2023 fellows of the Association for Computing Machinery