Matthew Turk
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Matthew Turk
Summary
Matthew Turk is a human[1]. He worked as an engineer[2]. He ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5 views/month, #7,297 of 1,000,298).[3]
Key Facts
- Matthew Turk's professions included engineer[2].
- Matthew Turk was employed by University of California, Santa Barbara[4].
- Matthew Turk's education included a stint at Carnegie Mellon University[5].
- Matthew Turk's education included a stint at Massachusetts Institute of Technology[6].
- Matthew Turk was educated at Virginia Tech[7].
- Matthew Turk's doctoral advisor was Alex Pentland[8].
- Matthew Turk received the Fellow of the International Association for Pattern Recognition[9].
- Matthew Turk received the IEEE Fellow[10].
- Matthew Turk received the ACM Fellow[11].
- Matthew Turk was a member of Association for Computing Machinery[12].
- Matthew Turk is recorded as male[13].
- Matthew Turk's instance of is recorded as human[14].
- Matthew Turk's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 305459341[15].
- Matthew Turk's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as no2013135088[16].
- Matthew Turk's Mathematics Genealogy Project ID is recorded as 110636[17].
- Matthew Turk's family name is recorded as Turk[18].
- Matthew Turk's given name is recorded as Matthew[19].
- Matthew Turk's given name is recorded as Alan[20].
- Matthew Turk's Google Scholar author ID is recorded as KltleWgAAAAJ[21].
- Matthew Turk's DBLP author ID is recorded as 61/3381[22].
- Matthew Turk's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11dxrv_nsm[23].
- Matthew Turk's National Library of Israel J9U ID is recorded as 987007369969505171[24].
- Matthew Turk's Yale LUX ID is recorded as person/d630983c-0544-4f65-8eb4-c9ba7216ead0[25].
Body
Education
Educated at Carnegie Mellon University[5], a private university[26], in United States[27], founded in 1900[28], headquartered in Pittsburgh[29]; Massachusetts Institute of Technology[6], a university[30], in United States[31], founded in 1861[32], headquartered in Cambridge[33]; and Virginia Tech[7], a university[34], in United States[35], founded in 1872[36]. Matthew Turk's doctoral advisor was Alex Pentland[8].
Career and Affiliations
Matthew Turk's professions included engineer[2]. Among his employers was University of California, Santa Barbara[4].
Recognition
Awards received include Fellow of the International Association for Pattern Recognition[9]; IEEE Fellow[10], a science award[37]; and ACM Fellow[11], a fellowship award[38].
Why It Matters
Matthew Turk ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5 views/month, #7,297 of 1,000,298).[3]
FAQs
What did Matthew Turk do for work?
Matthew Turk worked as engineer[2].
Where did Matthew Turk go to school?
Matthew Turk was educated at Carnegie Mellon University[5], Massachusetts Institute of Technology[6], and Virginia Tech[7].
What awards did Matthew Turk receive?
Honors received include Fellow of the International Association for Pattern Recognition[9], IEEE Fellow[10], and ACM Fellow[11].