Lee Spector
Cognitive
Science
Hampshire
College
Amherst, MA 01002 USA
413-559-5352
lspector@hampshire.edu
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Lee Spector is a Professor of Computer
Science
in the School of Cognitive
Science at Hampshire College
and an Adjunct Professor in the Department
of Computer Science at the University
of Massachusetts, Amherst. He
received a B.A. in Philosophy from Oberlin
College in 1984, and a Ph.D. from the Department of Computer
Science at the University of Maryland
in 1992. At Hampshire he has held the MacArthur Chair and served as the
elected faculty member of the Board of Trustees, the Dean of the School
of Cognitive Science, and Co-Director of the
Design, Art and Technology (DART) program. He directs the Hampshire
College Computational
Intelligence Laboratory and supervises
the Hampshire College Cluster
Computing Facility.
Dr. Spector teaches and conducts research in artificial intelligence,
artificial life, and a variety of areas at the intersections of
computer science with cognitive science, physics, evolutionary biology,
and the arts. He is the Editor-in-Chief of the journal Genetic
Programming and Evolvable Machines (published by Springer; see also
his editor's blog) and a
member of the editorial board of the journal Evolutionary
Computation (published
by MIT Press). He is a
member of the Executive Committee of the ACM Special
Interest Group on Evolutionary Computation (SIGEVO)
and he has produced over 100 scientific publications
including his book: Automatic
Quantum Computer Programming: A Genetic Programming Approach,
published by Kluwer Academic Publishers in 2004 and
reissued in paperback by Springer in 2007. Dr. Spector serves
regularly as an editor of scientific collections and as a track
chair, organizer, and reviewer for scientific
conferences. He
also writes occasionally for general audiences, including an OpEd
piece in The
Boston Globe (The
Globe's page, local
copy). He
has received the
highest honor bestowed by the National Science Foundation for
excellence in both teaching and research, the NSF Director's Award for
Distinguished Teaching Scholars (press releases: NSF, Hampshire).
He has won several
other awards and honors, including two gold medals in the Human
Competitive Results contest of the Genetic and Evolutionary Computation
Conference (2008 press
release, 2004
information) and election as a
fellow of the International Society for Genetic and Evolutionary
Computation (press
release).