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The College of Information Sciences and Technology, also known as IST, was opened in 1999 in response to the rapidly growing need in almost every field for education, leadership, and research in information sciences and technology. The college's goal is to educate a new generation of leaders, researchers, educators, technologists and scholars that are equipped to address the challenges presented by the complex interplay of information, technology, and people in the Digital Age. ==Faculty and Research== The College of Information Sciences and Technology (IST) is an interdisciplinary college that integrates a variety of perspectives from computer and information sciences, psychology, social science, economics and public policy, to study the interactions between information, technology, and people, to inform the design of innovative information technologies, and their societal impact. Faulty research focuses on artificial intelligence (including knowledge representation, machine learning, computer vision), informatics (including social informatics, health informatics, security informatics, community informatics), big data (search, analytics, predictive modeling), human-computer interaction, security and privacy, cognitive science, and socio-technical systems. The college has about 30 tenured and tenure track faculty and almost the same number of fixed term (non-tenured) teaching and research faculty. Some faculty of note include: * John Carroll * Lee Giles * Vasant Honavar * Frank Ritter * Mary Beth Rosson * Andrew Sears * James Z. Wang * John Yen 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Penn State College of Information Sciences and Technology」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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