Professor Natalio Krasnogor
Natalio
Krasnogor, Ph.D. is
EPSRC’s Leadership Fellow at University of Nottingham, United Kingdom;
Professor of Applied Interdisciplinary Computing at University
of Nottingham, United Kingdom; and
Visiting Professor at Weizmann Institute of Science,
Israel.
He is also
Founding Editor-in-Chief (technical) of the
Memetic Computing Journal.
The mission of
Nat’s research group is to derive new knowledge and
provide innovative
solutions to problems arising in natural complex systems (e.g. in
biology, chemistry, and physics) and man-made ones (e.g.
socio-technical
organizations, infrastructure in healthcare, logistics, etc). To
accomplish its mission, the group leverages its interdisciplinary
expertise in advanced information processing (e.g. image analysis,
machine learning, data mining), process modeling (e.g. optimization
under uncertainty), and high-performance computation (e.g. distributed,
cloud and GPU computing).
His research areas include:
Bioinformatics, Systems, and Synthetic Biology
His work in this area includes sophisticated search based methodologies
for protein structure prediction, ensemble methods for comparing large
protein datasets and data mining genes, signaling and metabolic
networks. He also works on modeling techniques for organ development
(e.g. plants’ roots) and cellular collectives (e.g. bacterial biofilms).
Information Processing in Complex Systems
Nat investigates unconventional computation paradigms as they occur in
nature and develops new computational substrates (e.g. molecular
computation, biological cells-based computation, etc). He is interested
in the dynamics of complex systems and how by understanding their
computational capabilities one could ultimately be able to control them.
Machine Intelligence
He carries out research at the leading edge of algorithms design with
the
goal of enabling computers to deal, autonomously, with extremely hard
problems. For this purpose he has developed techniques in data
abstraction and granular computing, computer vision, optimization, data
mining and machine learning and has applied these to a large number
of real world problems.
Nat coedited
Systems Self-Assembly, Volume 5: Multidisciplinary Snapshots (Studies
in Multidisciplinarity),
Recent Advances in Memetic Algorithms (Studies in Fuzziness and Soft
Computing), and
Nature Inspired Cooperative Strategies for Optimization (NICSO 2011)
(Studies in Computational Intelligence),
authored
Studies on the Theory and Design Space of Memetic Algorithms
and
Heurísticas para el TSP-2D Euclideo y
Simétrico Basadas en la Triangulación de
Delaunay y sus, and coauthored
Implementing conventional logic unconventionally:
Photochromic molecular populations as registers and logic gates
and
Enrichnet: network-based gene set enrichment analysis.
Read the
full list of his publications!
Read his
LinkedIn profile.
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