CS Talk - Grant Schoenebeck, University of Michigan

Event time: 
Friday, May 10, 2019 - 4:00pm
Location: 
AKW 200 See map
51 Prospect Street
New Haven, CT 06511
Event description: 

CS Talk - Grant Schoenebeck, University of Michigan

Title:   Eliciting Expert Information without Verification

Host: Yang Cai

Abstract:

A central question of crowd-sourcing is how to elicit expertise from agents.  This is even more difficult when answers cannot be directly verified. A key challenge holding back this field is that sophisticated agents may strategically withhold effort or information when they believe their payoff will be based upon comparison with other agents whose reports will likely omit this information due to lack of effort or expertise.

This talk will argue that information theory provides the “right way” to think about these problems. It will illustrate how information theoretic properties can directly translate into improved crowd-sourcing mechanisms. Time permitting, I will show a novel connection between mechanism design and learning from noisy data, a classic machine learning problem.

No information theory background will be assumed.

Bio:

Grant Schoenebeck is an assistant professor at the University of Michigan in the Computer Science and Engineering division. His work spans diverse areas in theoretical computer science but has recently focused on applying ideas from theoretical computer science to the study of social networks and mechanism design for information elicitation. His research is supported by the NSF, Facebook, and Google including an NSF CAREER award. Before coming to the University of Michigan in 2012, he was a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton. Grant received his PhD at UC Berkeley, studied theology at Oxford University, and received his BA in mathematics and computer science from Harvard.