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Denver Dash

Denver Dash is a Research Scientist at Intel Research and an adjunct Assistant Professor of Biomedical Informatics in the School of Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh. He received his B.S. in physics in 1994 from Case Western Reserve University and his M.S. in physics in 1996 from the University of Pittsburgh. He was a visiting teaching fellow in the Computer Science Department at the Technical University of Bialystok in 1997, and a NASA Graduate Student Research Fellow in the Intelligent Systems Program at the University of Pittsburgh from 1999-2003.

He received his PhD in May 2003, after which he was a postdoctoral research fellow at the Center for Bioinformatics at the University of Pittsburgh, were he worked with Greg Cooper on bio-surveillance using Bayesian methods and probabilistic graphical models. He joined Intel Research in September of 2003 where he has applied similar techniques to sort-test reduction and to discovery of weak, growing anomalies in systems of networked devices. He has served on the program committees of UAI, AAAI, AIStats, and ICML and has refereed for NIPS and most major AI and Machine Learning journals and conferences.