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 Faculty
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Bernardo Huberman
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Academic Title: Consulting Professor
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Publications:
Projects: Harvesting Social Knowledge, and designing novel
incentive and privacy mechanisms for distributed organizations.
``The dynamics of social dilemmas'', Scientific American, March, 1994.
The Ecology of Computation (book editor); Computation: The Micro and the Macro View
(book editor).
"The Laws of the Web: patterns in the Ecology of Information" MIT Press (2001).
Interests: Dynamics of distributed systems, the relation between global behavior and local procedures, and the appearance of novel properties in very large systems, especially the World Wide Web.
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BJ Fogg
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Academic Title: Lecturer
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Publications:
The most comprehensive explanation of my work is in my book, /Persuasive Technology/. For more info, see Persuasive Technology: Using Computers to Change What We Think and Do. For something online, see some of our Web credibility research
Interests:
I'm a psychologist who creates insight into how computing products -- from websites to mobile phone software -- can be designed to change what people believe and what they do. I direct research and design at the Persuasive Technology Lab on campus.
Keywords: captology, persuasion, influence, motivation, credibility, persuasive technology, ethics, learning, health interventions, behavior change, operant conditioning, narrative.
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Brian Knutson
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Academic Title: Assistant Professor
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Publications:
Knutson, B., Rick, S., Wimmer, G. E., Prelec, D., Loewenstein, G. (2007). Neural predictors of purchases. Neuron, 53, 147-157.
Kuhnen, C. M., & Knutson, B. (2005). The neural basis of financial risk-taking. Neuron, 47, 763-770.
Knutson, B., Taylor, J., Kaufman, M., Peterson, R., & Glover, G. (2005). Distributed neural representation of expected value. Journal of Neuroscience, 25, 4806-4812.
Knutson, B., Adams, C., Fong, G. & Hommer, D. (2001). Anticipation of monetary reward selectively recruits nucleus accumbens. Journal of Neuroscience, 21:RC159, 1-5.
Interests: Neuroscience of emotional experience and expression in mammals, functional magnetic resonance imaging, computational modeling, psychopharmacology.
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Brian Wandell
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Academic Title: Professor
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Publications:
/Foundations of Vision/, a textbook on Vision Science.
Interests: Neuroscience aspects of human vision, and image systems engineering involving display devices that rely on human vision; research methods include functional magnetic resonance imaging, computational and behavioral studies of human vision.
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Byron Reeves
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Academic Title: Professor
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Publications:
Reeves, B. and C. Nass /The Media Equation: How People Treat Computers, Television and New Media Like Real People and Places/. Cambridge University Press & CSLI, 1996
Interests: Psychological processing of mediated communication and human-computer interaction. Special interest in attention, memory and emotional responses to interactive media.
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Chris Chafe
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Academic Title: Professor
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Interests: Composer and cellist with an interest in composition and performance. Research interests: automatic music recognition, computer sound synthesis based on physical models, networks for audio and audio for networks.
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Christopher Manning
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Academic Title: Graduate Studies Director
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Publications: Joint Learning Improves Semantic Role Labeling (with K. Toutanova, A. Haghighi)
Accurate Unlexicalized Parsing (with D. Klein)
Probabilistic Syntax
Foundations of Statistical Natural Language Processing (with H. Schuetze).
Complex Predicates and Information Spreading in LFG (with A. Andrews).
Ergativity: Argument Structure and Grammatical Relations.
Interests: Natural Language Processing, Computational Linguistics, especially the use of corpora and statistical NLP techniques. Syntax (mainly probabilistic approaches, HPSG, LFG, and linguistic typology).
Office Hours:
Gates 158, Tue 3-4, Thu 10-11
At least that's when they were in Fall 2005. I'll probably forget to update this web page, so best to check http://nlp.stanford.edu/~manning/
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