Professor of Computer Science, Dartmouth College
I am the Albert Bradley 1915 Third Century Professor and Chair of Computer Science at Dartmouth. My research focuses on digital forensics, image analysis, and human perception. I received my undergraduate degree in Computer Science and Applied Mathematics from the University of Rochester in 1989, my M.S. in Computer Science from SUNY Albany, and my Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Pennsylvania in 1997. Following a two-year post-doctoral fellowship in Brain and Cognitive Sciences at MIT, I joined the faculty at Dartmouth in 1999. I am the recipient of an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship, a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, and I am a Fellow of the IEEE and National Academy of Inventors. I am also the Chief Technology Officer and co-founder of Fourandsix Technologies and a Senior Adviser to the Counter Extremism Project.
Mar 28, 2023 14:22 pm UTC| Technology
Shortly after rumors leaked of former President Donald Trumps impending indictment, images purporting to show his arrest appeared online. These images looked like news photos, but they were fake. They were created by a...
Text-to-image AI: powerful, easy-to-use technology for making art – and fakes
Dec 08, 2022 11:04 am UTC| Technology
Type Teddy bears working on new AI research on the moon in the 1980s into any of the recently released text-to-image artificial intelligence image generators, and after just a few seconds the sophisticated software will...
YouTube's paedophile problem is only a small part of the internet's issue with child sexual abuse
Mar 06, 2019 14:08 pm UTC| Insights & Views Technology
YouTube has, yet again, failed to protect children online. Recent investigations by Wired and video blogger Matt Watson have alleged that paedophiles were using the sites comments section to leave predatory messages on...
Shutdowns are a uniquely American drama − in the UK, it's just not Parliament's cup of tea
Ukraine recap: Ukraine and allies maintain optimism despite slow progress on the battlefield
Temporary carbon storage in forests has climate value — but we need to get the accounting right
Lagos building collapses: we used machine learning to show where and why they happen