Philip Haves is the Leader of the Simulation Research Group. He has worked on many different aspects of commercial buildings since 1986, with particular interest in simulation and building operations. He is a Fellow of ASHRAE, the immediate past chair of its Technical Committee on Energy Calculations and a former Chair of its Technical Committee on Building Operation Dynamics. He is a past president of IBPSA-USA, the U.S. affiliate of the International Building Performance Simulation Association. He has a B.A. in Physics from Oxford University and a Ph.D.
Researchers at CITRIS
Professor Kevin Healy
Kevin Healy received his Ph.D. at the University of Pennsylvania in Bioengineering in 1990. His research interests are biomaterials and tissue engineering. The design and synthesis of biomimetic materials that actively direct the behavior of mammalian cells to facilitate regeneration of tissue and organs, and the design and synthesis of materials that circumvent their passive behavior in complex mammalian cells is the focus of the work conducted at Berkeley.
Marti Hearst
Dr. Hearst focuses on designing, building, and evaluating information access systems. She has designed several novel information visualization and text analysis techniques for this purpose, including TextTiling, TileBars, and the Cat-a-Cone.
Joseph Hellerstein
Joseph M. Hellerstein is a Professor of Computer Science at the University of California, Berkeley. Hellerstein’s work focuses on data-centric systems and the way they drive computing.
Jonathan P. Heritage
Professor Heritage is conducting research in microphotonics, terahertz bandwidth optics, next generation optical networks, optical microwave interactions and vacuum optoelectonics. Recent developments include MEMS mirror arrays for all optical switching, femtosecond pulse shaping, and miniature broadband time delay scanners. He investigates the impact of physical layer impairments on performance of switched WDM networks.
Rebecca Hernandez
Associate Professor of Land, Air and Water Resources, UC Davis
Erin Hestir
Campus Director, UC Merced
James Holston
James Holston’s current research examines the worldwide insurgence of democratic citizenships in the context of global urbanization. Three considerations frame this work: those of theme, method, and critique.
Houman Homayoun
Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, UC Davis
Elizabeth Honig
Elizabeth Alice Honig was obsessed from an early age by anything to do with her namesake, Elizabeth I. An undergraduate career at Bryn Mawr, where she served as Costumes Mistress to the annual Elizabethan May Day celebrations, confirmed this inclination. She worked at Hampton Court Palace and then went to Yale. There, her secondary fascination with shopping lead to a change in direction and she wrote her dissertation on Flemish market scenes and the history of economic thought. She lived in Amsterdam for many years, where she could listen to English radio while studying the art of Belgium.
Jan Hopmans
Professor of Vadose Zone Hydrology
University of California, Davis
David Horsley
Dr. David Horsley is a Professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at the University of California, Davis, USA, and has been a co-director of the Berkeley Sensor and Actuator Center (BSAC) since 2005. His research interests include microfabricated sensors and actuators with applications in optics, displays, and physical and biological sensors.
Professor Arpad Horvath
Arpad Horvath is a professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of California, Berkeley (http://faculty.ce.berkeley.edu/horvath/), Head of the Energy, Civil Infrastructure and Climate Graduate Program, Director of the Transportation Sustainability Research Center, and Director of the Engineering and Business for Sustainability certificate program (http://sustainable-engineering.berkeley.edu).
Chenming Hu
TSMC Distinguished Chair, Professor
UC Berkeley
Michael Isaacson
Associate Dean of Research and Graduate Studies, Professor
University of California, Santa Cruz
M. Saif Islam
CITRIS at UC Davis Director Emeritus
Ken Jacobs
Ken Jacobs is the Chair of the Labor Center, where he has been a Labor Specialist since 2002. His areas of specialization include health care coverage, the California budget, low-wage work, the retail industry and public policy. Recent papers have examined the impact that the national health reform law will have on California small businesses, their employees, the self-employed, and the state overall; the economic effects of various options for closing California’s budget deficit; and declining job-based health coverage in California and the U.S.
Lucia Jacobs
I have recently become interested in behavioral robotics and human-robot interactions, as a natural extension of my interests in animal behavior (People and Robots). My […]
Ali Javey
Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, UC Berkeley
Bryan Jenkins
Finding means to improve the conversion and expand the beneficial use of biomass fuels constitutes the primary research effort for the Biomass Laboratory. Much of the current biomass conversion research is targeted at understanding the role of inorganic materials found in biomass during thermal conversion to heat and power via combustion and gasification. Boilers burning biomass are subject to fouling and corrosion from alkali metals, chlorine, and other constituents of biomass released during combustion.
Jeffrey Jenkins
Research Interests: Complex adaptive systems Critical resource geography Landscape values Participatory mapping Public lands and protected areas Graduate Groups: Environmental Systems Discipline: Political Ecology, Environmental […]
Professor Michael Jordan
Michael I. Jordan is the Pehong Chen Distinguished Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and the Department of Statistics at the University of California, Berkeley. He received his Masters in Mathematics from Arizona State University, and earned his PhD in Cognitive Science in 1985 from the University of California, San Diego. He was a professor at MIT from 1988 to 1998.
Anthony Joseph
Dr. Joseph received his S.B. and S.M. degrees in EECS in 1988 and his Ph.D. degree in Computer Science in 1998, all from MIT. He has been on the faculty at the University of California, Berkeley since 1998, holding the Chancellor’s Associate Professor Chair since 2007. Starting in June, he will be the director of the Intel Research Berkeley Laboratory.
Jill G. Joseph
Jill G. Joseph is the associate dean for research at the Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing. A physician scientist and collaborator with a distinguished commitment to interprofessional and interdisciplinary education and research, Joseph conducts multiple research projects requiring the participation of colleagues across a wide range of disciplines.
Suad Joseph
Most of Dr. Joseph’s anthropological field research has focused on her native Lebanon. Her early work investigated the politicization of religious sects in Lebanon leading up to the civil war in 1975, questions of ethnicity and state, local community organization and development. That work led her to consider the impact of women’s visiting networks on local and national politics, and the relationships between local communities, community organizations and the state.
Professor Kenneth Joy
Ken Joy is a Professor in the Computer Science Department at the University of California, Davis. He came to UC Davis in 1980 in the Department of Mathematics and was a founding member of the Computer Science Department in 1983. Professor Joy’s research and teaching interests are in the area of visualization, geometric modeling, and computer graphics.