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This profile was automatically generated using 62 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 62 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 62 references Web References
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1. mos.org
mos.org/exhibits_shows/live_pr - [Cached]Published on: 11/27/2007 Last Visited: 11/27/2007
Find out how Brian Chan, an artist and graduate engineering student at MIT, learned to fold a single sheet of paper into an extraordinary creature like an atlas beetle, house centipede, or skimmer dragonfly. (details). -
2. Science news articles, Discover Magazine subscriptions, Science magazines online - Discover.ComHow to Walk on Water
www.discover.com/issues/nov-03 - [Cached]Published on: 12/3/2003 Last Visited: 12/3/2003
To prove this result, MIT mechanical-engineering graduate student Brian Chan built a four-inch-long robot that uses the same technique.
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Hu, David L., Brian Chan, and John W. M. Bush. -
3. Absolute | Investment | Advisers
www.absoluteadvisers.com/man_i - [Cached]Published on: 4/30/2008 Last Visited: 4/30/2008
: BRIAN CHEN : Quantitative Analyst
Mr. Chen is a quantitative analyst for Absolute and is responsible for the firm's quantitative analytics, including manager screening, portfolio allocation and risk measurement modeling.
Brian Chen has led the development of the fund's proprietary portfolio optimization, manager selection, and risk modeling techniques.In addition to being AIA's Quantitative Analyst, Mr. Chen has been a Research Associate at Fort Hill Capital Management since 2003.His expertise is in the development and implementation of sophisticated models and quantitative trading strategies for equity derivatives.Prior to joining Fort Hill, Mr. Chen was the Founder and Chief Scientist at Chinook Communications, Inc.At this 40-employee company he invented enabling technology that allows broadband operators to transparently transmit multi-megabit digital data streams simultaneously with existing video signals within the same channel, thus greatly expanding network capacity.Prior to Chinook, Mr. Chen was Research Affiliate and Graduate Fellow, Digital Signal Processing Group, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 1994-2002; Lucent Technologies Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ, Member of Technical Staff-Level 1 and Consultant, 1996 and 1997-1998.
Mr. Chen's educational background includes the following: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA - Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, June 2000, Minor: Finance S.M. in Electrical Engineering, Feb. 1996; The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI - B.S.E. in Electrical Engineering summa cum laude, May 1994

