Michael L. Best

Michael L. Best

Dr. Micahel L. Best.
Residence Atlanta, Georgia
Nationality American
Fields Computer Science,
ICT4D,
ICT sustainibility,
Institutions Georgia Tech,
Alma mater MIT Media Lab,
Doctoral advisor Pattie Maes

Michael L. Best is an American computer scientist and international development specialist serving as the first director of the United Nations University Institute on Computing and Society established in 2015.[1][2][3] He is associate professor (on sabbatical leave) at the Georgia Institute of Technology where he holds a joint appointment with the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs and the School of Interactive Computing.

Working in the areas of ICT4D, he is co-founder and editor-in-chief emeritus of journal Information Technologies and International Development and leads the "Global Computing" column for Communications of the ACM.[3] He has published on various topics such as formative work in ICT sustainability,[4] rural access,[5] and ICTs for peacebuilding in conflict stressed environments.[6]

His work has done much to promote ICT4D as an academic discipline having founded the area’s most significant journal (ITID) and helped to lead its largest conference (ICTD).

Early life and education

Best was born in Los Angeles, California. He attended UCLA for undergraduate studies in computer science and engineering, where for his senior thesis he developed, on a Connection Machine, a massively parallel algorithm for the graph coloring problem. After graduating with a BS in 1989 he joined Thinking Machines Corp in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he worked on various projects, including parallel programming languages, message passing I/O,[7] and network simulation for the CM 5 supercomputer.

Best attended graduate school at the MIT Media Lab, receiving an MS under the supervision of Ken Haase. His PhD work, supervised by Pattie Maes, applied evolutionary theory to problems in text analysis and retrieval.[8]

ICT4D and Georgia Tech

Upon graduating with his PhD in 2000, Best joined the Media Lab as a research scientist and the Center for International Development at Harvard University as a research fellow. He went on to direct the eDevelopment Group at the MIT Media Lab as well as Media Lab Asia, at the time an MIT Media Lab collaborative research initiative in India.[9] He has served as fellow or faculty associate of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University since 2003.

In 2008, Best joined the Georgia Institute of Technology as an assistant professor. In 2011 he received tenure and was promoted to associate professor. He directs the Technologies and International Development Lab (TID Lab), where he has supervised many global projects, in particular in Africa and South Asia. The TID Lab is a multi-disciplinary research collaborative combining social and computer sciences with policy and design. At Georgia Tech he has received substantial recognition for his work including the Ivan Allen Faculty Legacy Award (2009), People & Technology Award (2011), and Stephen A. Denning Faculty Award for Global Engagement (2014). His work has been supported by a variety of sponsors including The MacArthur Foundation, USAID, and Microsoft. He has published 100 papers in journals, conferences, or books.

Best has made numerous contributions towards establishing ICT4D as an academic discipline. He is the founding editor-in-chief, with Ernest J. Wilson III, of the field’s highest-rated journal,[10] Information Technologies and International Development (ITID). In addition he is one of the early organizers of the area’s major conference, the International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development, having served as its general chair in 2012. He is founder and lead of the Global Computing column for Communications of the ACM.

References

  1. John Pauleneses (June 26, 2015). "UNU-CS: a ONU em Macau, com novo projecto e novo director". Ponto Final (in Portuguese).
  2. Phil Bolton (February 12, 2015). "UN taps Georgia Tech Prof to launch Macau Program/". Global Atlanta.
  3. 1 2 Prof. Michael Best Appointed Director of UNU Institute on Computing and Society, Macao, China
  4. Michael L. Best; C. M. Maclay. Kirkman, G.; Sachs, J.; Schwab, K.; et al., eds. The Global Information Technology Report 2001–2002: Readiness for the Networked World. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  5. Best, M. L.; Kumar, R. (2008). "Sustainability Failures of Rural Telecenters: Challenges from the Sustainable Access in Rural India (SARI) Project". Information Technologies and International Development. 4 (4): 31–45. doi:10.1162/itid.2008.00025.
  6. Best, M. L.; Jones, K.; Kondo, I.; Thakur, D.; Wornyo, E.; Yu, C. (2007). "Post-Conflict Communications: The Case of Liberia". Communications of the ACM. 50 (10): 33–39. doi:10.1145/1290958.1290987.
  7. Best, M. L.; Stanfill, C.; Greenberg, A.; Tucker, L. W. (1993). "CMMD I/O: A parallel Unix I/O". Proceedings of Seventh International Parallel Processing Symposium: 489–495.
  8. Best, M. L. "Microevolutionary Language Theory". Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
  9. Best, M. L. (2006). "Kali, Creator and Destroyer: A Personal Recollection on Media Lab Asia". Information for Development. 4 (1).
  10. Heeks, R. "ICT4D Journal Ranking Table". ICTs for Development. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.