Mark A. O'Neill

Mark A. O'Neill (born 3 November 1959) is an English computational biologist with interests in artificial intelligence, systems biology, complex systems and image analysis. He is the creator and lead programmer on a number of computational projects including the Digital Automated Identification SYstem (DAISY) for automated species identification and PUPS P3, an organic computing environment for Linux.

Mark A. O'Neill
O'Neill in 2011
Born3 November 1959 (1959-11-03) (age 60)
Grantham, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom
NationalityEnglish
CitizenshipBritish
Alma materUniversity of London, University of Sheffield
Known forDigital Automated Identification SYstem (DAISY), PUPS P3
Scientific career
Fieldsecological modelling, computational neuroscience, complex systems, machine vision
InstitutionsCambridge University, University College London, Oxford University
Doctoral advisorIan Dowman
Other academic advisorsG. Paul Otto, Peter Rounce
Notable studentsClaus C. Hilgetag, Sarah E. Barlow, Daniel T. Reed

Education

O'Neill was educated at The King's School, Grantham, Sheffield University and University College London.[1]

Research interests

O'Neill's interests lie at the interface of biology and computing. He has worked in the areas of artificial life and biologically inspired computing. In particular, he has attempted to answer the question "can one create software agents which are capable of carrying a useful computational payload which respond to their environment with the flexibility of a living organism?"

He has also investigated how computational methods may be used to analyze biological and quasi biological systems for example: ecosystems and economies.

O'Neill is also interested in ethology, especially the emergent social ecosystems which occur as a result of social networking on the internet. His recent projects include the use of artificial intelligence techniques to look at complex socio-economic data.[2] He has also self-published on the evolution of sex[3] and the convergent nature of economies and ecologies.[4]

On the computer science front, O'Neill continues to develop and contribute to a number of other open source and commercial software projects and is involved in the design of cluster/parallel computer hardware via his company, Tumbling Dice Ltd. Long-running projects include DAISY; [5] PUPS P3 an organic computing environment for Linux; Cryopid, a Linux process freezer; the [Mensor digital terrain model generation system]; and RanaVision, a vision based motion detection system. He has also worked with public domain agent based social interaction models such as Sugarscape and artificial life simulators, for example physis, which is a development of Tierra.

O'Neill has been a keen naturalist since childhood. In addition to his interests in complex systems and computer science, he is a member of the Royal Entomological Society and an expert in the rearing and ecology of hawk moths. He is also currently convenor of the [Electronic and Computing Technology Special Interest Group] (SIG) for the Royal Entomological Society.

He is also interested in the use of precision agriculture methodologies to monitor agri-ecosystems,[6] and has been an active participant in a series of projects looking at the automatic tracking of bumblebees,[7][8] and other insects[9][10] using vision, and using both network analysis and remote sensing techniques to monitor ecosystem health. Latterly, he has become interested in applying these techniques in the commercial sphere to look at issues of corporate responsibility and sustainability in industries like mining and agriculture which have significant ecological footprints.

He has also been involved in both computational neuroscience and systems biology, the former association resulting in many papers while working at Oxford University. Work in the latter area led to the successful flotation in 2007 of a systems biology company, e-Therapeutics, where O'Neill was a senior scientist, assisted with the establishment of the company, and was named in a number of seminal patents.

O'Neill is a fellow of the British Computer Society, the Institute of Engineering and Technology, and the Royal Astronomical Society. He is also a chartered engineer, a chartered IT professional and a member of the Institute of Directors. He was one of the recipients of the BCS Award for Computing Technology in 1992.

Publications

  • Mark A. O'Neill publications indexed by Google Scholar
  • ORCID 0000-0002-7042-690X
gollark: And with more Google telemetry.
gollark: Why get a Chromebook instead of some sort of sane laptop which you can run Linux on?
gollark: Try just setting the environment variable in that terminal. I don't know if Windows lets you do that, though.
gollark: Maybe it's some sort of version mismatch.
gollark: I think CUDA is a bit faster generally, but only works on Nvidia cards.

References

  1. O'Neill, Mark A. (1992). Kinematic Model of the SPOT-1 Sensor (Thesis). University College London.
  2. Lloyd Parkes, Elizabeth; Lang, Robert I. W.; O'Neill, Mark A. (24 April 2008). "Understanding Tweens" Identity as Expressed through Conspicuous Consumption: an Adaptive Neural Net Approach to the Analysis of a Complex Socio-Economic Dataset" (PDF). Child and Teen Consumption – Conference on Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Child and Teen Consumption. Trondheim, Norway: Tumbling Dice.
  3. O'Neill, Mark A. (19 September 2010). "Sex and the mitochondrion" (PDF). Tumbling Dice. Retrieved 19 December 2010. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. O'Neill, Mark A. (26 January 2011). "Looking at the parallels between ecologies and economies: comparing natural and man made market places" (PDF). Tumbling Dice. Retrieved 26 January 2011. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. Reed, Sarah (25 June 2010). "Pushing Daisy". Science. 328 (5986): 1628–1629. doi:10.1126/science.328.5986.1628. PMID 20576867.
  6. "Camera Traps" (PDF). Tumbling Dice. 19 September 2010. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
  7. Cheung, Louisa (26 July 2006). "Homing instinct of bees surprises". BBC News. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
  8. Sample, Ian (26 July 2006). "The flight of the bumblebee is measured at record eight miles". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 June 2012.
  9. Tracking Bombus terrestris (ITV Tyne Tees). Retrieved 19 December 2010.
  10. O’Neill, M.A.; Barlow, S; Port, G. P. (2010). "Recording pollinator visitation to Rhinanthus minor (Hay rattle) using an automated motion sensitive detection system". Entomology 2010. University of Swansea.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.