Sergey Brin
(2004) Google
"Cited for the invention that has fundamentally changed the way information is retrieved today."
Presented by: Favio Roversi-Monaco, Chairman - Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio in Bologna
Sergey Brin, a native of Moscow, received a bachelor of science degree with honors in mathematics and computer science
from the University of Maryland at College Park. He is currently on leave from the Ph.D. program in computer science at
Stanford University, where he received his master's degree. Brin is a recipient of a National Science Foundation Graduate
Fellowship as well as an honorary MBA from Instituto de Empresa . It was at Stanford where he met Larry Page and worked on
the project that became Google. Together they founded Google Inc. in 1998, and Brin continues to share responsibility for
day-to-day operations with Larry Page and Eric Schmidt.
Brin's research interests include search engines, information extraction from unstructured sources, and data mining of large
text collections and scientific data. He has published more than a dozen academic papers, including Extracting Patterns and
Relations from the World Wide Web; Dynamic Data Mining: A New Architecture for Data with High Dimensionality , which he
published with Larry Page; Scalable Techniques for Mining Casual Structures ; Dynamic Itemset Counting and Implication Rules
for Market Basket Data ; and Beyond Market Baskets: Generalizing Association Rules to Correlations .
Brin has been a featured speaker at several international academic, business and technology forums, including the World
Economic Forum and the Technology, Entertainment and Design Conference. He has shared his views on the technology industry
and the future of search on the Charlie Rose Show, CNBC, and CNNfn. In 2004, he and Larry Page were named "Persons of the
Week" by ABC World News Tonight.
Bibliographies
Interview with Google's Sergey Brin, Linux Gazette
Bibliography
Google Corporate History
Washington Post Interview
ABC News Persons of the Week
Profile, BBC
The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine
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