Carnegie Mellon University Faculty

by Sylviastel | created - 22 Feb 2015 | updated - 22 Feb 2015 | Public

Jerome Apt; Professor; former NASA astronaut and now Professor of Technology, Executive Director of Carnegie Mellon Electricity Industry Center, Graduate School of Industrial Administration.

Elizabeth Bailey; Professor 1983-1991; former Dean and Professor of Economics, Industrial Administration, and Public Policy, Graduate School of Industrial Administration now John C. Hower Professor of Business and Public Policy at Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.

Kathleen Carley; Professor; Computational sociologist and pioneer of dynamic network analysis. William W. Cooper; Professor; professor of operations research and accounting at the Tepper School of Business and founding Dean of the Heinz College.

Robyn Dawes; Professor; pioneer in the field of mathematical psychology. Kenneth B. Dunn; Professor 1979-1987, 2002-present; Dean of Tepper School of Business, former Managing director of Morgan Stanley.

David Farber; Professor 2003-present; co-creator of ARPANET and form Chief Technologist for the FCC.

James Goodby; Professor 1989-present; Distinguished Service Professor of Engineering and Public Policy, former US Foreign Service Officer including US Ambassador to Finland 1980-1981.

Terrence Hayes; National Book Award winner in 2010 for his poetry book, "Lighthead." John Heinz III; faculty member 1970-1971; Senator from Pennsylvania. Geoffrey Hinton; Professor 1982-1987; computer scientist known for his work on artificial neutral networks, part-time Google researcher, co-inventor of the back propagation and contrastive divergence training algorithms, and important figure in the deep learning movement. Henry Hornbostel; Professor; founded the Carnegie Mellon School of Architecture and designed original buildings on campus. Watts Humphrey; Professor; former Vice President of IBM, Fellow of Software Engineering Institute. Jeffrey Hunker; Professor; Senior director for Critical Infrastructure for the US National Security Council 1999-2001; Deputy Assistant to the Secretary of Commerce 1996-1998; senior department of commerce official for environmental policy 1996-1998; former Senior policy advisor to the secretary of commerce 1993-1996; former Dean of the Heinz College.

Roberta Klatzky; Professor; cognitive scientist and leading researcher in hap tics.

Margot Livesey; author of six novels, short stories, and essays on fiction. George Loewenstein; Professor; pioneer in the field of Behavioral economics and faculty in the department of social and decision sciences.

Brian MacWhinney; Professor; leading language acquisition researcher and creator of the CHILDES database.

Jon Peha; Professor; Chief Technologist for the FCC.

Richard Rashid; Professor 1979-1991; computer scientist, Microsoft Research SVP.

Walter Dill Scott; Professor 1916-1918; pioneer in applied psychology, President of the American Psychological Association; President of Northwestern University. Kathryn Shaw; Professor 1981-2003; member of the Council of Economic Advisors, Executive Officer of the President 1999-2001. Alfred Spector; Professor; Vice President of Research and Special Initiatives at Google.

Sridhar Tayur; Professor; Ford Distinguished Research Chair and Professor of Operations Management, Founder of SmartOps Corporation and OrganJet Corporation.

Arnold R. Weber; Professor and Provost; professor in economics and public policy at Carnegie Mellon University and President of the University of Colorado and Northwestern University.

Jerome Wolken; 1917-1999; biophysicist and head of biology department.

Clarence Zener; Professor 1968-1993; theoretical physicist, namesake of the Zener diode, Zener voltage and Zener pinning.

1. Lenore Blum

Script_department | Amen

Lenore Blum is known for Amen (1986), Mr. President (1987) and Julia Robinson and Hilbert's Tenth Problem (2008).

Professor; wife of Manuel Blum; renowned for being a National Science Foundation Career Advancement AWard winner for her contributions to Computer Science.

2. Anthony Daniels

Actor | Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens

Initially not a science fiction fan, theatre actor Anthony Daniels was persuaded by his agent to meet George Lucas for the casting of C-3PO in Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (1977). He went on to perform the character, both his voice and body in the suit, for all the episodic Star Wars films ...

adjunct professor; actor

Professor 1987-2005; economist and author of "The Rise of the Creative Class."

4. Israel Hicks

Producer | Striker

Israel Hicks was born on August 23, 1943 in Orangeburg, South Carolina, USA. He was an actor and producer, known for Striker (1976), On Being Black (1968) and Christ Is Risen (1976). He was married to Catherine and Renée Harriston. He died on July 3, 2010 in Sleepy Hollow, New York, USA.

1943-2010; stage director who presented August Wilson's entire 10 play Pittsburgh Cycle.

media artist and current faculty member of the School of Art.

decision scientist and psychologist in the department of social and decision sciences.

7. Allan Meltzer

Self | Money for Nothing: Inside the Federal Reserve

Allan Meltzer was born on February 6, 1928 in Boston, Massachusetts, USA. He was married to Marilyn Ginsburg. He died on May 8, 2017 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.

Professor; chairperson of the special US congressional commission that studied World Bank and International Monetary Fund operated.

8. Mel Shapiro

Director | Sammy Stops the World

Mel Shapiro is known for Sammy Stops the World (1979), The Lay of the Land (1997) and Infrared (2009).

Head of Drama department;

9. Robert S. Siegler

Team Umizoomi

Robert S. Siegler is known for Team Umizoomi (2010), Theories of Human Development (2002) and A Little Curious (1998).

Professor; Teresa Heinz Professor of Psychology at Carnegie Mellon University and recipient of the American Psychological Association's 2005 Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award.

10. Honus Wagner

Actor | Spring Fever

American baseball player, born in Mansfield (now Carnegie), Pennsylvania. His real name was John Peter Wagner. He played semi-professional ball in Ohio and was given a contract (1896) by the Paterson, New Jersey, club before entering (1897) major-league play with the Louisville (Kentucky) club of ...

baseball and basketball coach; one of the first five members of the Baseball Hall of Fame.



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