Kenneth Joseph is an assistant professor in Computer Science and Engineering at the University at Buffalo who researches the dynamics and cognitive representations of stereotypes and prejudice using machine learning, NLP, agent-based modeling, and socio-cognitive theory. With a decade-plus of experience spanning a postdoc at Northeastern’s Network Science Institute and a fellowship at Harvard’s IQSS, he blends rigorous computational methods with social-science questions to study how sociocultural structures shape behavior and beliefs. Trained in Societal Computing at Carnegie Mellon and with a CS background from Michigan, he operates at the intersection of data-driven modeling and theory-building. Colleagues know him for bridging technical depth with social impact through the Computing for Social Good group, and for being far more active on Twitter than on LinkedIn.
12 years of coding experience
Bachelor's degree, Computer Science, Bachelor's degree, Computer Science at University of Michigan
Master's degree, Computation, Organizations and Society, Master's degree, Computation, Organizations and Society at Carnegie Mellon University
Contributions:91 pushes, 1 branch in 7 years 7 months
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Kenneth Joseph - Assistant Professor at Northeastern University