About Me
I am a second year master’s student in the Computer Science Theory Group at the University of Toronto, where I am fortunate to be supervised by Allan Borodin and Nisarg Shah.
My primary research area is Social Choice Theory, a field that looks at how groups of people should come to collective decisions when the people’s preferences over outcomes may differ. Particularly, my work involves formalizing what it means for a decision to be “Fair”, and coming up with effective ways to find the fairest outcome for any given situation. This has applications to designing better voting systems and elections, finding better ways to allocate resources, and even in deciding how AI systems should behave.
I am also very interested in other fields at the intersection of Computer Science and Economics (such as Algorithmic Game Theory and Mechanism Design), and in the design and analysis of Online Algorithms.
If you ever see me somewhere and don’t feel like talking about computer science, I am always happy to talk about music, movies, and board games.