Bing Liu (computer scientist)
Date of Birth: 1983
Place of Birth: China
Education: National University of Singapore, University of Illinois at Chicago, Carnegie Mellon University, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
Research interests: Sentiment Analysis, Natural Language Processing, Data Mining, Machine Learning, Web Mining
Bing Liu was a Chinese-American professor of computer science who specialized in data mining, machine learning, and natural language processing. In 2002, he became a scholar[disambiguation needed] at University of Illinois at Chicago.
Academic research
He developed a mathematical model which can reveal fake advertising. Also he teaches the course "Data Mining" during the Fall and Spring semesters at UIC. The course usually involves a project and various quiz/examinations as grading criteria.
He is best known for his research on sentiment analysis (also called opinion mining), fake/deceptive opinion detection, and using association rules for prediction. He also made important contributions to learning from positive and unlabeled examples (or PU learning), Web data extraction, and interestingness in data mining.
Two of his research papers published in KDD-1998 and KDD-2004 received KDD Test-of-Time awards in 2014 and 2015. In 2013, he was elected chair of SIGKDD, ACM Special Interest Group on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining.
Honors and awards
- In 2014, he was named Fellow of IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers).
- In 2015, he was named Fellow of ACM "For contributions to knowledge discovery and data mining, opinion mining, and sentiment analysis".
- In 2016, he was elected Fellow of AAAI "For significant contributions to data mining and development of widely used sentiment analysis, opinion spam detection, and Web mining algorithms."
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