Contributors

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Burstiness Analysis and Event Detection

    PhD Statistics
    Columbia University

    CURRENT POSITION
    LinkedIn

  • History
    University of Chicago

    CURRENT POSITION
    History PhD Candidate, Stanford University

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    History, Digital Humanities

    PhD Mathematics
    Columbia University

    CURRENT POSITION
    Postdoctoral Researcher

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Collection Processing

    BA Computer Science and Evolutionary Biology
    Columbia University

    CURRENT POSITION
    LinkedIn

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Machine Learning and NLP

    BA Information Science and Modern Middle Eastern History
    Columbia University

    CURRENT POSITION
    LinkedIn

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Collection Processing

    MS Computer Science
    Columbia University

    CURRENT POSITION
    ​​​​​​​LinkedIn

  • Until his death in 2021, Robert Jervis was the the Adlai E. Stevenson Professor of International Affairs at Columbia University. Dr. Jervis earned his BA from Oberlin College in 1962. He received his PhD from the University of California, Berkeley in 1968. From 1968 to 1974 he was appointed Assistant (1968–1972) and Associate (1972–1974) Professor of Government at Harvard University. From 1974 to 1980 he was Professor Political Science at the University of California, Los Angeles. Specializing in international politics in general and security policy, decision making, and theories of conflict and cooperation in particular, his Why Intelligence Fails: Lessons from the Iranian Revolution and the Iraq War was published by Cornell University Press in April 2010. Among his earlier books are American Foreign Policy in a New Era (Routledge, 2005), System Effects: Complexity in Political and Social Life (Princeton, 1997); The Meaning of the Nuclear Revolution (Cornell, 1989); Perception and Misperception in International Politics (Princeton, 1976); and The Logic of Images in International Relations (Columbia, 1989).

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Web Development / Strategy

    BA Political Science
    Columbia University

    CURRENT POSITION

    Product Marketing Manager, Google

    LinkedIn

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    NLP and Machine Learning

    Professor, Fundação Getulio Vargas (FGV)

    LinkedIn

  • Ray Abruzzi is the publisher for Wiley Digital Archives, a program to digitize the archival holdings of learned societies. Ray has been working for over a decade to make primary sources accessible to students, educators, and researchers, and has partnered with over 300 libraries, archives, and other institutions around the world to digitize archival and library collections. Ray has over 20 years of experience in academic publishing and his projects have brought over 275M page-images spanning seven centuries into view for research and education through libraries. Ray is a junior at Columbia University's School of General Studies where he is a member of the Center for Science and Society and the executive editor of the Columbia Journal of History. Prior to joining Wiley in 2017, Ray was vice president and publisher, at Gale | Cengage Learning.

  • NTU Associate Professor

    Operations Research and Statistics group

    MIT Sloan School of Management

  • Professor at Stony Brook University

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    User Interface Development

    BA History of Science
    Yale University

    CURRENT POSITION
    History MPhil Candidate, Cambridge

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Entity Linking

    MS Computer Science
    Columbia University

    LinkedIn

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Named Entity Recognition

    BS Computer Science, Minor in Economics and History
    Columbia University

    LinkedIn

  • CURRENT POSITION
    Advisor, System Architecture - Scalability - Back-End
    LinkedIn

  • MS Computer Science
    Columbia University

    Data Ingestion

    CURRENT POSITION

    LinkedIn

  • Michael Flynn worked for History Lab between 2020 and 2023. Before starting at the lab, he graduated magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from Brown University as a double major in History, with a focus in American Political History, and Political Science, International and Comparative Politics track. He has previously interned for Nancy Pelosi in Washington, D.C., and at the San Francisco District Attorney’s office. At Brown, Michael was president of Brown’s chapter of the Alexander Hamilton Society, and was involved in Model United Nations, the Brown Journal of History, and various other clubs.

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Entity Linking, Redaction Analysis

    BA Computer Science & Mathematics
    Columbia University

    CURRENT POSITION
    LinkedIn

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Redaction Analysis

    BA History
    Columbia University

    CURRENT POSITION
    LinkedIn

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Topic Modeling

    BA Computer Science & History
    Columbia University

    LinkedIn

  • AREA OF RESEARCH

    Improving OCR

    BS Computer Science
    Columbia University

    LinkedIn

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    User Interface

    MA/MSc International and World History
    Columbia University and the London School of Economics

    CURRENT POSITION
    LinkedIn

  • BA Information Science / History
    Columbia University

    Data Ingestion / Collection Processing

    CURRENT POSITION

    MA Computer Science, Stanford University

    LinkedIn

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Collection Processing

    MS Computer Science
    Columbia University

    CURRENT POSITION
    LinkedIn

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    NLP and Machine Learning

    Professor, Fundação Getulio Vargas (FGV)

    LinkedIn

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Improving OCR

    BS Computer Science, Minor in Applied Math
    Columbia University

    LinkedIn

  • Eric is a former intelligence analyst with four years of experience as a contractor for the Department of Homeland Security. His research interests include the history of technology, deep history, and material history. He is a founding editor at "Clamour," a forthcoming quarterly, and a contributor to "The Encyclopedia of American Recessions and Depressions". He earned his MA and MSc in International and World History from Columbia and the London School of Economics. His dissertation "Naming the Net: The Domain Name System, 1983-1990" explored the history of naming in the early Internet.

  • David Madigan is professor of statistics, provost, and senior vice president of academic affairs at Northeastern University. Previously he was Columbia's vice president for the Arts and Sciences and dean of the faculty.

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    History, Digital Humanities

    PhD History
    Columbia University

  • Daniel Krasner is the co-Founder of KFit Solutions, a data science consulting firm, which delivers statistical engineering solutions across various sectors (financial, commerce, media, news, startup). He has been the technology lead with the "Declassification Engine Project" focusing on data processing/structuring, backend/API development, and statistical modeling. His current interests and work focus on high performance statistical solutions in text and natural language processing. Previously, Daniel was the chief data scientist at Sailthru, an email and behavioral analytics platform, a senior researcher at Johnson Research Labs, and a professor teaching Applied Data Science in the Columbia University statistics department.

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Topic Modeling, Redaction Analysis

    BA Computer Science
    Columbia University

    LinkedIn

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Web Development

    BA Computer Science
    Columbia University

  • Arthur Spirling is the Class of 1987 Professor of Politics and the Director of Graduate Studies at Princeton University. He was previously Associate Professor of Politics and Data Science at New York University where he also served as the Deputy Director and the Director of Graduate Studies at the Center for Data Science, and Chair of the Education and Training Working Group of the Moore-Sloan Data Science Environment. He received his PhD from the University of Rochester, Department of Political Science, in 2008. From 2008 to 2015, he was an Assistant Professor and then the John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Social Sciences in the Department of Government at Harvard University. He specializes in political methodology and legislative behavior, with an interest in the application of texts-as-data, Bayesian statistics, item response theory and generalized linear models in political science.

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Topic Modeling

    PhD Computer Science
    Princeton University

    CURRENT POSITION
    LinkedIn

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    International and Global History

    Professor, Universidade de São Paulo

    Website

  • AREA OF RESEARCH
    Digital Media History

    BA Political Science and History
    Columbia University

    CURRENT POSITION
    LinkedIn

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