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Gordon BrownProfessor Gordon Brown is a Professor in the Department of Psychology, working in the area of psychology, economics, and consumer behaviour. His research interests are in models of human timing and memory; reading; scale-invariant cognition; oscillator-based dynamic models of timing, memory, and sequential behaviour.

 

Matthias EnglertDr Matthias Englert is an EPSRC postdoctoral fellow in Theoretical Computer Science. His research interests are online and randomized algorithms.

 

Stephen JarvisProfessor Stephen Jarvis is Deputy Chair and Head of Research at the Department of Computer Science. He also leads the High Performance Systems Group (HPSG), which has held more than £5 million worth of research grants since its inception. The HPSG has an established reputation in high-throughput, transaction-based enterprise systems, such as those employed by banks.

 

Dr Oleg KozlovskiDr Oleg Kozlovski is an Associate Professor (Reader) in the Warwick Mathematics Institute. He has experience in algorithmic trading and financial information systems. His research interests are dynamical systems, ergodic theory, mathematical physics and financial mathematics. Currently, Oleg plays central role in the MSc in Financial Mathematics.

 

Oded LachishDr Oded Lachish is a research fellow in the Centre for Discrete Mathemaitics and its Applications (DIMAP). He has significant industrial experience, with three years at Motorola Semiconductor (now Freescale), and three at IBM. He brings his expertise in massive data sets.

 

Hynek MlnarikDr Hynek Mlnarik is a postdoctoral research fellow in the Warwick Institute for Financial Computing. He received a PhD from Masaryk University where he developed a quantum programming language LanQ. Apart from his theoretical interest in language semantics, artificial intelligence, and quantum information processing, he has several years of commercial experience running his own business in system analyses, database design and optimization, and programming.

 

Rajagopal NagarajanDr Rajagopal Nagarajan is an Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science. He holds a PhD in Computer Science from Imperial College, London.  He has significant experience in research and development in various areas of computer science, having held positions in the US, Canada, and the UK. He has actively participated in several EPSRC and EU projects and networks.

 

Subramanian Ramamoorthy Dr Subramanian Ramamoorthy is a Lecturer in the School of Informatics at The University of Edinburgh. He holds a PhD in Electrical and Computer Engineering from The University of Texas at Austin. His current research work is focussed on the use of machine learning methods to solve difficult planning and control problems that arise in the domains of robotics, automated trading agent design and systems approaches to biology. He participated in the Penn-Lehman automated trading project, winning the May 2004 competition. He also has several years of industrial experience, having worked in a number of research and development groups at National Instruments Corp.

 

Rudolf Roemer Dr Rudolf Roemer is an Associate Professor (Reader) in the Department of Physics and is Director of the Centre for Scientific Computing. His research interests are in solid state physics, theoretical solid state physics, computational physics, disordered materials, quantum Hall effect, transport problems in quantum systems, meso- and nanoscopic physics, exact solutions, and mathematical physics.

 

Mark SalmonProfessor Mark Salmon is a Professor in Finance in the Warwick Business School. He is the Director of the Financial Econometrics Research Centre (FERC) and the Warwick Finance Research Institute (WFRI). He was formerly the Deutsche Morgan Grenfell Professor of Financial Markets, Cass Business School, London and Previously held the position of Professor at European University Institute in Florence. Currently, he is an advisor to the Bank of England and has many links with City institutions. His research interests are financial econometrics; behavioural finance; asset pricing; knightian uncertainty; risk management; asset management.

 

Rahul SavaniDr Rahul Savani obtained a PhD in computational game theory from the London School of Economics. He holds one of the coveted EPSRC Postdoctoral Research Fellowships in theoretical computer science. Rahul won the prestigious Penn-Lehman automated trading competition in May 2005. As well as doing academic research into computational game theory and finance, he develops algorithmic trading strategies for proprietary trading firms.

 

Neil StewartDr Neil Stewart is a Reader in the Department of Psychology. His research interests are in judgement and decision making, perceptual identification and categorisation, and perceptual learning. He supervises research into behavioural finance.

 

Christoph UngemachDr Christoph Ungemach is a research fellow in the Department of Psychology. His research interests are in experience-based decision making, financial decision daking, and consumer decision making.

 

Nick WebberDr Nick Webber is Director of the Financial Options Research Centre and a Reader in the Finance group of the Warwick Business School. He was previously Director of the Centre for Computational Finance at Cass Business School, City University. His reasearch interests are interest rate modelling and hedging, financial options, and computational finance. Currently, Nick runs the MSc in Financial Mathematics.

 

Two former faculty have agreed to play advisory roles: Dr Roel Oomen, until recently a member of the Warwick Business School and now at Deutsche Bank, and Dr Daniel Spooner, formerly in Computer Science and now at Merrill Lynch.