James Z. Wang

James Ze Wang

James Z. Wang (Photo: December 2015)
Born 1972
Residence United States
Citizenship China
United States
Fields Computer science
Information technology
Institutions Pennsylvania State University
Alma mater Stanford University (M.S., Ph.D.)
University of Minnesota (B.S.)
Doctoral advisor Gio Wiederhold[1]
Doctoral students Yixin Chen, Dhiraj Joshi, Xiaonan Lu, Ritendra Datta, Brian A. Canada, Mu Qiao (co-advised), Lei Yao, Neela Sawant, Yu Zhang, Xin Lu
Known for image retrieval, image annotation, painting analysis, visual aesthetics and emotions, big visual data

James Ze Wang[1] (Chinese: 王则; born 1972) is a Chinese American computer scientist. He is a professor of the College of Information Sciences and Technology at Pennsylvania State University.[2] He is also an affiliated professor of the Molecular, Cellular, and Integrative Biosciences Program; the Computational Science Graduate Minor; and the Social Data Analytics Graduate Program.[2] He is co-director of the Intelligent Information Systems Laboratory.[2][3] He was a visiting professor of the Robotics Institute at Carnegie Mellon University from 2007 to 2008.[3] In 2011 and 2012, he served as a program manager in the Office of International Science and Engineering at the National Science Foundation.[3]

Education

Wang received a summa cum laude Bachelor's degree in Mathematics and Computer Science from the University of Minnesota (advisor: Dennis Hejhal), an M.S. in Mathematics and an M.S. in Computer Science, both from Stanford University, and a Ph.D. degree in Medical Information Sciences from Stanford University's Biomedical Informatics and Database groups (advisor: Gio Wiederhold).

Contributions

Wang is the author or coauthor of two monographs and over 100 journal articles, book chapters, and refereed conference papers, including one coauthored paper published in Science. His works have been widely cited. For example, SIMPLIcity: Semantics-Sensitive Integrated Matching for Picture Libraries (2001) has received more than 2000 citations. Image Retrieval: Ideas, Influences, and Trends of the New Age (2008) has received over 3000 citations.

He has carried out work with the Biomedical Informatics Group and the Computer Science Database Group at Stanford that makes possible the retrieval of specific images from databanks of images. He has co-developed the SIMPLIcity semantics-sensitive image retrieval system, the ALIPR automatic linguistic indexing of pictures system, and the ACQUINE visual aesthetics rating system. These systems have been applied to several domains including biomedical image analysis, satellite imaging, Web image filtering, and art and cultural imaging. The SIMPLIcity system has been sought after and obtained by researchers from more than 100 institutions.

His studies have also involved retrieval from large-scale genome databases through pattern recognition. His research work has been reported widely by significant media including Discovery, Scientific American, MIT Tech Review, Public Radio, NPR, and CBS.

Wang has served as a General Chair for the 11th Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) International Conference on Multimedia Information Retrieval (Philadelphia, March 2010), a Program Committee Vice Chair for the 12th International World Wide Web Conference and as an ad hoc reviewer for 60+ scientific journals and many conferences. He has served on the EU/DELOS-US/NSF Working Group on Digital Imagery for Significant Cultural and Historical Materials and provided a written testimony at the National Academies Committee on Tools and Strategies for Protecting Kids from Pornography and Their Applicability to Other Inappropriate Internet Content.

Wang was featured in a PBS series NOVA ScienceNow (Art Authentication, Season 3 and Season 4). He contributed in developing new computerized methods to help detect fake Van Gogh paintings by analyzing the direction and amount of brushstrokes in the painting, as compared to original Van Gogh's. He was successful in determining the fake version of the painting, produced by Charlotte Caspers, from the original.

Awards

Wang has been a recipient of an NSF Career award and the endowed PNC Technologies Career Development Professorship (provided to Penn State by the PNC Foundation).

Publications

Books

Representative peer-reviewed papers

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.