Dr. Hsinchun Chen is
McClelland Professor
of Management
Information Systems
at the University of
Arizona. He received
the B.S. degree from
the National Chiao-Tung
University in
Taiwan, the MBA
degree from SUNY
Buffalo, and the
Ph.D. degree in
Information Systems
from the New York
University. Dr. Chen
had served as a
Scientific
Counselor/Advisor of
the National Library
of Medicine (USA),
Academia Sinica
(Taiwan), and
National Library of
China (China). Dr.
Chen is a Fellow of
IEEE and AAAS. He
received the IEEE
Computer Society
2006 Technical
Achievement Award.
He is author/editor
of 20 books, 25 book
chapters, 180 SCI
journal articles,
and 120 refereed
conference articles
covering Web
computing, search
engines, digital
library,
intelligence
analysis, biomedical
informatics,
data/text/web
mining, and
knowledge
management. His
recent books
include: Mapping
Nanotechnology
Knowledge and
Innovation (2008),
Digital Government:
E-Government
Research, Case
Studies, and
Implementation
(2007); Intelligence
and Security
Informatics for
International
Security:
Information Sharing
and Data Mining
(2006); and Medical
Informatics:
Knowledge Management
and Data Mining in
Biomedicine (2005),
all published by
Springer. Dr. Chen
was ranked #8 in
publication
productivity in
Information Systems
(CAIS 2005) and #1
in Digital Library
research (IP&M 2005)
in two bibliometric
studies.
He serves on ten
editorial boards
including: ACM
Transactions on
Information Systems,
IEEE Transactions on
Systems, Man, and
Cybernetics, Journal
of the American
Society for
Information Science
and Technology,
Decision Support
Systems, and
International
Journal on Digital
Library. He has been
an advisor for major
NSF, DOJ, NLM, DOD,
DHS, and other
international
research programs in
digital library,
digital government,
medical informatics,
and national
security research.
Dr. Chen is founding
director of
Artificial
Intelligence Lab and
Hoffman E-Commerce
Lab. The UA
Artificial
Intelligence Lab,
which houses 30+
researchers, has
received more than
$25M in research
funding from
NSF, NIH, NLM, DOD,
DOJ, CIA, DHS, and
other agencies. The
Hoffman E-Commerce
Lab, which has been
funded mostly by
major IT industry
partners, features
one of the most
advanced e-commerce
hardware and
software
environments in the
College of
Management. Dr. Chen
is conference
co-chair of ACM/IEEE
Joint Conference on
Digital Libraries (JCDL)
2004 and has served
as the
conference/program
co-chair for the
past eight
International
Conferences of Asian
Digital Libraries (ICADL),
the premiere digital
library meeting in
Asia that he helped
develop.
Dr. Chen is also
(founding)
conference co-chair
of the IEEE
International
Conferences on
Intelligence
and Security
Informatics (ISI)
2003-2009. The ISI
conference, which
has been sponsored
by NSF, CIA, DHS,
and NIJ, has become
the premiere meeting
for international
and homeland
security IT
research. Dr. Chen's
COPLINK system,
which has been
quoted as a national
model for public
safety information
sharing and
analysis, has been
adopted in more than
1600 law enforcement
and intelligence
agencies. The
COPLINK research had
been featured in the
New York Times,
Newsweek, Los
Angeles Times,
Washington Post,
Boston Globe, and
ABC News, among
others. The COPLINK
project was selected
as a finalist by the
prestigious
International
Association of
Chiefs of Police
(IACP)/Motorola 2003
Weaver Seavey Award
for Quality in Law
Enforcement in 2003.
COPLINK research has
recently been
expanded to border
protection (BorderSafe),
disease and bioagent
surveillance (BioPortal),
and terrorism
informatics research
(Dark Web), funded
by NSF, CIA, and
DHS. In
collaboration with
selected
international
terrorism research
centers and
intelligence
agencies, the Dark
Web project has
generated one of the
largest databases in
the world about
extremist/terrorist-generated
Internet contents
(web sites, forums,
blogs, and
multimedia
documents). Dark Web
research supports
link analysis,
content analysis,
web metrics
analysis, multimedia
analysis, sentiment
analysis, and
authorship analysis
of international
terrorism contents.
The project has
received significant
international press
coverage, including:
Associated Press,
USA Today, NSF
Press, Washington
Post, Fox News, BBC,
PBS, Business Week,
Discover magazine,
WIRED magazine,
Government Computing
Week, Second German
TV (ZDF), Toronto
Star, and Arizona
Daily Star, among
others.
Dr. Chen is the
founder of the
Knowledge Computing
Corporation, a
university spin-off
company and a market
leader in law
enforcement and
intelligence
information sharing
and data mining. He
has
also received
numerous awards in
information
technology and
knowledge management
education and
research including:
AT&T Foundation
Award, SAP Award,
the Andersen
Consulting Professor
of the Year Award,
the University of
Arizona Technology
Innovation Award,
and the National
Chiao-Tung
University
Distinguished
Alumnus Award. Dr.
Chen had served as a
keynote speaker in
major international
security
informatics, medical
informatics,
information systems,
knowledge
management, and
digital library
conferences. He is a
Distinguished/Honorary
Professor of several
major universities
in Taiwan and China.
Dr. Chen serves as
the Program co-Chair
of the International
Conference on
Information Systems
(ICIS) 2009, to be
held in Phoenix,
Arizona.
|