Postdoc, @Stanford. Biomedical Data Science, #MachineLearning, Social and Information #Networks, #RecSys.
California by way of Nepal, Germany, Switzerland.
Preprint of our #WWW2021 paper "Random Walks with Erasure: Diversifying Personalized Recommendations on Social and Information Networks" is now on Arxiv https://t.co/dqsbqjoMYw #recsys#networks
We are organizing this year a satellite at @Networks2021 where 3 keynote speakers and 5 invited guests will share their latest work on how #NetworkStructure is shaping society, and vice versa.
Join the discussion at 8:30am EST (2:30pm CEST) on 23 June.
#StayTuned
👇🏼
Random Walks with Erasure: Diversifying Personalized Recommendations on Social and Information Networks @biasedcoin & Abraham Bernstein https://t.co/lFy1Pk4Vc2
Happy to share that our full paper "Random Walks with Erasure: Diversifying Personalized Recommendations on Social and Information Networks" has been accepted at @TheWebConf#WWW2021
Check out our new published paper of how to evaluate recommender systems by fusing different aspects from the performance space! More details at: https://t.co/gKcYYC26bs
#BigData#RecommenderSystems#AI
@_gpop_ @biasedcoin@DragiKocev
Wildfire smoke is a public health hazard. The risks could be long lasting for children, whose lungs are small and growing.
Here's what it's like for children with asthma in California.
With pictures by @nytchangster and graphics by @PopovichN
https://t.co/kQoyVwmGrw
We had the pleasure of hosting @andrewdai at @StanfordMed@StanPopHealth today. Greatly enjoyed his insightful talk about Machine Learning research on Electronic Health Records.
Record breaking temperatures. Record droughts.
We’re in a CLIMATE CRISIS.
And what we're experiencing in California is coming to every community -- all across the United States of America -- unless we get our act together on climate change.
What are the health consequences of the terrible air quality experienced recently in CA due to wildfires? In a back-of-envelope, we calculate that smoke exposure has likely caused 1000-3000 excess deaths in CA in the last month. Blog+thread https://t.co/5FmhaxGewB
A person who died in Santa Clara County on Feb. 6 was infected with the #coronavirus, a stunning discovery that makes that individual the first recorded COVID-19 fatality in the U.S., according to autopsy results. @ErinAllday and @MatthewKawahara story. https://t.co/MI47X8Fmh8