Jeffrey Heer

Jeffrey Michael Heer
Born (1979-06-15) 15 June 1979
Fields Computer science
Institutions University of Washington,
Stanford University
Alma mater University of California, Berkeley
Doctoral advisor Maneesh Agrawala
Doctoral students Mike Bostock, Jason Chuang, Sanjay Kairam, Sean Kandel, Diana MacLean, Arvind Satyanarayan
Known for Data visualization
Notable awards TR35, Sloan Fellowship, ACM Grace Murray Hopper Award
Website
homes.cs.washington.edu/~jheer

Jeffrey Michael Heer (born 15 June 1979) is an American computer scientist best known for his work on information visualization and interactive data analysis. He is an associate professor of Computer Science & Engineering[1] at the University of Washington, where he directs the UW Interactive Data Lab.[2] He co-founded Trifacta with Joe Hellerstein and Sean Kandel in 2012.

Education

As a graduate student at the University of California, Berkeley, he developed the Prefuse and Flare[3] visualization toolkits.

Research and career

Before joining the University of Washington, Heer was an assistant professor of Computer Science at Stanford University, from 2009 to 2013. He is also co-founder and Chief Experience Officer of Trifacta.[4] Heer's research focuses on new systems and techniques for data visualization. As a member of the Stanford University faculty, he worked with Mike Bostock on the Protovis and D3.js systems. Along with Joe Hellerstein and Sean Kandel, Heer has also developed interactive tools for data transformation (including Data Wrangler[5]), leading to the founding of Trifacta. Other research contributions include work on the graphical perception of visualizations, social data analysis, text visualization, and interactive language translation tools.

Awards and recognition

Heer's research has been recognized by an ACM Grace Murray Hopper Award,[6] a Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Data-Driven Discovery Investigator Award,[7] an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship,[8] and MIT Technology Review's TR35 list.[9] Heer and his students have won best paper awards at human-computer interaction[10][11] and visualization[12] conferences. His work has also appeared in the popular press.[13][14][15][16][17][18]

References

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