Goals
The Ph.D. Program in Computation, Organizations and Society (COS) is
the newest Ph.D. Program in the School of Computer Science at Carnegie
Mellon University. The Ph.D. program in COS trains computer scientists
to develop emerging technology with provable guarantees of the technology's
appropriateness for specific social, organizational, and/or legal settings.
These additional constraints are identified and incorporated within
the original problem definitions of the emerging technologies, and remain
in consideration during development. The results are developed technologies
that are easier to adopt and are more responsible to the environments
in which they operate.
The Ph.D. program in COS prepares students to be leading researchers
in this heavily sought area by providing students with in-depth training
not just in computation but also in fundamentals of relevant ways of
looking at networks of people and organizations, and at their integration
into management, law, and policy. The Ph.D. program in COS builds on
a multi-discplinary team of world-class faculty. It exposes students
to traditional tenets of computer science weaved with interdisciplinary
coursework, hands-on applications and cutting-edge research. Recent
examples include privacy technology, social networks and e-business.
Motivation
The past decade has seen a tremendous increase in both the breadth
and the complexity of computational systems society has come to rely
on. This increase in turn is giving rise to a number of new and challenging
societal, management and policy issues, which themselves often call
for new technological innovations. Examples include privacy rights management,
data privacy, electronic market mechanisms and automated negotiation,
dynamic network modeling, online dispute resolution, etc. Attacking
these new problems requires profound understanding of computation and
the interplay between the managerial, personal and policy networks in
which technology operates. Unfortunately, current degree programs in
traditional disciplines (e.g. computer science, policy or management)
fail to provide the kind of multi-disciplinary curriculum needed to
train tomorrow’s leaders in this emerging area. Today’s
demand for integrated expertise far exceeds supply. As demand for this
new breed of researchers continues to grow, it becomes increasingly
important to offer a PhD program that fills the void.
There is a general lack of understanding by computer scientists of social,
economic and policy issues impacted by computational systems. Yet, increasingly
more and more ACM and IEEE computer science conferences and journals,
as well as traditional funding sources, focus on work that integrates
these disciplines. The Privacy in D.A.T.A. workshop held at Carnegie
Mellon University in March 2003 brought together some of the world’s
leading computer science theorists to examine data privacy problems;
the biggest hurdle was helping these computer scientists understand
the personal, organizational and policy settings in which well-defined
theoretical computer science problems related to data privacy exist.
Similarly, multi-agent research has increasingly had to combine methods
of social and economic science with computer science, and, conversely,
social and economic sciences are increasingly turning to multi-agent
modeling for solutions to problems that elude traditional analytical
methods. Dynamic network analysis, multi-agent systems, market mechanisms
and privacy-preserving data mining, to name just a few, have become
major themes at ACM, IEEE, and AAAI conferences. Yet, while computer
science researchers are increasingly asked to address or integrate social,
economic or legal dimensions into the emerging technologies they develop,
traditional doctoral programs continue to emphasize computation as a
standalone discipline and ignore its many social, economic and policy
ramifications. In contrast, the PhD program in Computation, Organizations
and Society (COS) is a computer science based cross-disciplinary program
that aims to train computer scientists to understand the bigger picture
in which computation operates and to create technology from this broader
vantage point.
Who Should apply
Students in the Ph.D. program in Computation, Organization and Society
(COS) are expected to come from industry, government or directly from
undergraduate programs. All applicants should have finished an undergraduate or masters degree in a computing related field before they start in the COS program. Computing related fields include, but are not limited to, computer science, mathematics, statistics, bio-informatics, computational or mathematical social science or management science, and operations research. Students apply
to the program because of their desire to do research at the confluence
of computer science, management, social science, law and/or policy.
Students are expected to generally be pioneers who are unsatisfied with
traditional degree programs and have strong interest in interdisciplinary
research incorporating vigorous computational approaches.
FELLOWSHIPS
COS Students are encouraged to apply for the following fellowships:
1. DoD fellowships- known as "NDSEG" (National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate fellowship). More details can be found at http://www.asee.org/resources/fellowships/ndseg/
2. NASA fellowships- it's up to the grad student to work with the department's admin to write a proposal. More information available at http://www.nasa.gov/home/
3. Department of Energy has a fellowship, too. It's run through "Krell Institute". More information available at http://www.krellinst.org/
4. At the University level there is "FRAC" which is the Fellowship Resource & Advicing Center. Contact information for the FRAC staff can be found at: http://www.cmu.edu/frac/FRAC%20pages/FRAC_contact%20us.htm
Fellowship Resource Advising Center, Warner Hall 5th floor, cubicle 530A phone 412-268-1969 ; fax 412-268-6159