Denise Eugenia Dresser Guerra
Denise Dresser is a professor of political science at the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM), where she has taught Comparative Politics, Political Economy, and Mexican Politics since 1991. Dr.
Denise Dresser is a professor of political science at the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM), where she has taught Comparative Politics, Political Economy, and Mexican Politics since 1991. Dr.
He is full time professor and researcher at the Computer Science Department. His main research interests are motion planning and control for autonomous robots. He received a Ph.D. in Computer Science from Texas A&M University, as well as a M.Sc. in Electrical Engineering and a B.Sc. in Computer Engineering from UNAM (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México). He was awarded a Fulbright/García Robles scholarship to pursue his PhD, a CONACYT scholarship to pursue his Masters, and was a SuperComputing Scholar at UNAM. He has been member of the National System of Researchers in Mexico.
He is currently a part-time professor associated with the Digital Systems Department, where he has lectured a diversity of engineering and telecommunications courses since 2004. Additionally, he is an independent, consultant, an ITU consultant, and a member of the Scientific Committee of FORMIT, in Rome, Italy.
Marcelo Mejía graduated as a Biomedical Engineer at the Autonomous Metropolitan University (UAM) in 1982 and has Master degrees in Computer Science from the UAM, and in Computer Networks from Supélec, in France. In 1989, he obtained a Doctorate in Computer Science from the University of Rennes I, France, working on his doctoral research at the INRIA (Rennes and Sophia Antipolis).
Andrei Gomberg’s research (and advising) interests concern theoretical and experimental study of political and legal institutions. His personal webpage contains links to his publications and ongoing work.
Ignacio conducts research on theoretical econometrics, data management, machine learning, financial econometrics, time series, applied econometrics, forecasting, nonparametric procedures, and nonlinear methods. His recent econometric research has focused on inference in models defined by conditional moment restrictions, as well as time series methods for non-causal and non-invertible linear models.
Romans Pancs does research on markets and auctions and is interested in supervising students who wish to work on microeconomic theory in general.
His personal webpage contains links to his publications and ongoing work.
Shaun McRae is an Assistant Professor in the Centro de Investigación Económica and Department of Economics at ITAM. His fields of specialization are Energy and Environmental Economics and Industrial Organization. Shaun's research includes studies of electricity tariff and subsidy design in developing countries, the analysis of market performance in restructured electricity markets, the study of driving and gasoline purchase behavior, and the analysis of investments in pipeline infrastructure. He has a Ph.D. in economics from Stanford University.
Tridib’s research focuses on dynamic games, mechanism design and experimental economics. His current research projects pertain to dynamic cheap talk and balanced prior free mechanisms. Tridib is also involved in studying data generated from experiments on correlated equilibria.
Researcher and full time Professor of the Department of Industrial and Operations Engineering at the ITAM. PhD in Metalurgical engineering from the National Polytechnic Institute, PhD in Materials Science from the Autonoumous Metropolitan University, MSc and BSc in Aeronautical Engineering from the National Polytechnic Institute.