Resume-aware faculty matching

Find professors who actually fit you

Upload your resume. Four AI agents analyze your background, rank the faculty who fit, inspect their recent research, and help you draft outreach — grounded in their actual work, not templates.

Free to startNo credit cardCancel anytime
Top matches Balanced preset
Dr. Sarah Chen
Stanford · Interpretability · NLP
91
Dr. Marcus Holloway
MIT · Robotics · RL
84
Dr. Aisha Okonkwo
CMU · Fairness · HCI
82
Nova · Professor Researcher · re-ranking top 20…

James West

· Associate Professor EmeritusVerified

University of Washington · Slavic Languages & Literatures

Active 2004–2024

h-index32
Citations6.7k
Papers14847 last 5y
Funding
See your match with James West — sign in to PhdFit.Sign in

Research topics

  • Computer Science
  • Data science
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Sociology
  • Psychology
  • Computer Security
  • Social Science
  • Cognitive science
  • Biology
  • Economic geography
  • Internet privacy
  • Geography

Selected publications

  • Science communication with generative AI

    Nature Human Behaviour · 2024 · 49 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Computer Science
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Computer Science
  • Gender-based homophily in collaborations across a heterogeneous scholarly landscape

    PLoS ONE · 2023 · 23 citations

    • Sociology
    • Computer Science
    • Social Science

    In this article, we investigate the role of gender in collaboration patterns by analyzing gender-based homophily-the tendency for researchers to co-author with individuals of the same gender. We develop and apply novel methodology to the corpus of JSTOR articles, a broad scholarly landscape, which we analyze at various levels of granularity. Most notably, for a precise analysis of gender homophily, we develop methodology which explicitly accounts for the fact that the data comprises heterogeneous intellectual communities and that not all authorships are exchangeable. In particular, we distinguish three phenomena which may affect the distribution of observed gender homophily in collaborations: a structural component that is due to demographics and non-gendered authorship norms of a scholarly community, a compositional component which is driven by varying gender representation across sub-disciplines and time, and a behavioral component which we define as the remainder of observed gender homophily after its structural and compositional components have been taken into account. Using minimal modeling assumptions, the methodology we develop allows us to test for behavioral homophily. We find that statistically significant behavioral homophily can be detected across the JSTOR corpus and show that this finding is robust to missing gender indicators in our data. In a secondary analysis, we show that the proportion of women representation in a field is positively associated with the probability of finding statistically significant behavioral homophily.

  • Misinformation in and about science

    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences · 2021 · 370 citations

    1st authorCorresponding
    • Computer Science
    • Computer Security
    • Internet privacy

    Humans learn about the world by collectively acquiring information, filtering it, and sharing what we know. Misinformation undermines this process. The repercussions are extensive. Without reliable and accurate sources of information, we cannot hope to halt climate change, make reasoned democratic decisions, or control a global pandemic. Most analyses of misinformation focus on popular and social media, but the scientific enterprise faces a parallel set of problems-from hype and hyperbole to publication bias and citation misdirection, predatory publishing, and filter bubbles. In this perspective, we highlight these parallels and discuss future research directions and interventions.

Frequent coauthors

  • Carl T. Bergstrom

    University of Washington

    44 shared
  • Bree Norlander

    24 shared
  • Juan Pablo Alperín

    Simon Fraser University

    20 shared
  • Vincent Larivière

    18 shared
  • Jason Portenoy

    18 shared
  • Kishore Vasan

    17 shared
  • Stefanie Haustein

    17 shared
  • Ashley Farley

    Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

    16 shared

Education

  • MS/BS, Biology

    Utah State University

    2004

Similar researchers at University of Washington

  • Resume-aware match score
  • Save to shortlist
  • AI-drafted outreach

See your match with James West

PhdFit ranks faculty by your research interests, methods, and publications — grounded in their actual work, not templates.

  • Free to start
  • No credit card
  • 30-second signup