Professor Moshe Tennenholtz joined the Faculty in 1993 He received his Ph.D. in Applied Mathematics and Computer Science from Weizmann Institute of Science in 1991. Prior to joining the Faculty Moshe held a Post-doctoral research affiliate and a Research Associate positions at Stanford University (1991-1993)
Prof. Tennenholtz holds the Sondheimer Technion Academic Chair. From 2008–2014 he was a Principlal Researcher with Microsoft Research, where he founded the basic research activity at the Microsoft Israel R&D center. He is also the scientific director of the Technion–Microsoft Electronic Commerce Research Center. In joint work with colleagues and students he introduced several contributions to the interplay between computer science and game theory, such as the study of artificial social systems, co-learning, non-cooperative computing, distributed games, the axiomatic approach to qualitative decision making, the axiomatic approach to ranking, reputation, and trust systems, competitive safety analysis, program equilibrium, mediated equilibrium, and learning equilibriוum.
Protocols for non-cooperative environments
Learning in non-cooperative environments
Non-Cooperative Computation
Program Equilibrium and Learning Equilibrium
The power of mediators
Ranking, Trust, and Reputation Systems
Advertising Mechanisms
The Agent Perspective in Game Theory
Artificial Social Systems
Social Contexts in Multi-Agent Systems
Mechanism Design for Data Science