FERNANDO C.N. PEREIRA NAMED RACHLEFF PROFESSOR
AND CHAIR OF COMPUTER AND INFORMATION SCIENCE AT PENN
PHILADELPHIA
- Fernando C.N. Pereira, Ph.D., has been named Andrew and
Debra Rachleff Professor and chair of the Department
of Computer and Information Science at the University
of Pennsylvania, effective July 1, 2001.
Pereira comes to Penn from the technology sector. Currently distinguished
research scientist at the Pittsburgh office of WhizBang! Labs - a Web
information mining company that has built the Internet's largest commercial
online recruiting site, FlipDog.com - Pereira also spent 11 years as a
researcher at Bell Laboratories and AT&T Labs, including six years as
head of AT&T's machine learning and information retrieval research department.
Pereira holds degrees from the University of Lisbon and the University
of Edinburgh, which awarded him a Ph.D. in 1982. An internationally recognized
researcher in computational linguistics and artificial intelligence with
particular focus on machine learning techniques in language and speech
recognition, he has taught at Stanford University, the Univer-sity of
California at Santa Cruz, Lisbon, and Penn. A fellow of the American Association
for Artificial Intelligence, Pereira has served on the editorial boards
of the Journal of Logic Pro-gramming, Studies in Logic, Language, and
Information, the Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research and the MIT
Press series on logic programming.
"Fernando Pereira is a deep scholar who also has an innate understanding
of the practical applications of research," said Eduardo D. Glandt, Ph.D.,
dean of Penn's School of Engi-neering and Applied Science. "This powerful
combination of talents has allowed him to work successfully across the
interface between the academic and the corporate worlds. His knowledge
of the two cultures will be a precious asset to our school."
Attracting Pereira to Penn were the university's strength in his own
field and the opportunities a highly interdisciplinary research university
affords for study of the increasingly complex relationships between digital
information processing and the natural and social worlds.
"The great successes of computing and communications technologies in
the last few years are not a sign that all the main fundamental questions
of computer science have been solved," Pereira said. "On the contrary,
those successes are creating extraordinary new challenges in science,
engineering, education and policy. Universities are in the best position
to address those new questions. Their great permeability to society through
the constant flow of students, postdoctoral researchers, research grants
and faculty involvement in outside activities allows them to learn firsthand
of the ideas, concerns and needs of all sectors of society."
As head of the computer and information science department at Penn,
Pereira's priorities will include keeping undergraduate education abreast
of rapid changes in technology and society; maintaining a strong, bold
research program; and further developing links with other academic departments
in the sciences and humanities.
The endowed chair Pereira will assume is named for Andrew and Debra
Rachleff of Portola Valley, Calif. Andrew Rachleff, a 1980 graduate of
the Wharton School and member of the Board of Overseers of Penn's School
of Engineering and Applied Science, is co-founder and general partner
of Benchmark Capital, a Silicon Valley venture capital firm dedicated
to helping talented entrepreneurs build technology companies. He also
serves on the boards of CacheFlow, Charitable Way, Equinix, CoreExpress,
Gemini Networks, Loudcloud, Mahi Net-works, NorthPoint Communications
and Rasa Foundries.
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