ESP Biography



JACOB JENSEN, ESP Teacher




Major: Not available.

College/Employer: Google

Year of Graduation: Not available.

Picture of Jacob Jensen

Brief Biographical Sketch:

Not Available.



Past Classes

  (Clicking a class title will bring you to the course's section of the corresponding course catalog)

S4266: The French Revolution and the beginning of the Modern Era in Splash Spring 2015 (Apr. 11 - 12, 2015)
The French Revolution annihilated the old order in France, introduced a new tradition of radical ideology to Europe, paved the way for Napoleon, marked the beginning of the end for traditional monarchies, and had immediate influence across the old world and new.


M2859: Let me Google that for You: The Technology that Searches the Web in Splash! Spring 2013 (Apr. 13 - 14, 2013)
If you've ever used the internet, you've used a search engine. In this class I explain how typing a few words into a text box returns the most relevant pages on the internet from billions and billions that exist, with surprisingly little spam, in less than a second. Topics: Web-scale computing infrastructure, text similarity algorithms, trust on the web: the PageRank algorithm, MapReduce parallel framework, personalization, from keywords to meaning.


M2862: The Cutting Edge of Artificial Intelligence in the Data Age in Splash! Spring 2013 (Apr. 13 - 14, 2013)
I discuss the cutting edge of Artificial Intelligence research and application and how it's being influenced by an ever-increasing volume of digitized data, including examples you might know, like Apple's personal assistant system Siri, or IBM's Jeopardy-winning Watson, and Google's self-driving cars, and those you might not, like technology that can sense the stock-market's movements before anything else.


M2579: Complexity: What do ant colonies, stock markets and facebook have in common? in Splash! Fall 2012 (Nov. 03 - 04, 2012)
Complexity science studies emergent phenomena that result when many simple parts build a system with dynamic behavior that simple models can't capture. How can a bunch of ants creates an enormous colony and efficiently search for and retrieve food, when each individual ant alone couldn't even feed itself? The answer is in the pheremone trails that each ant lays down when it's heading back to the nest, telling others whether it found food or not, leading to an ever-growing wave of followers swarming to the richest source of nutrients. These sorts of effects, where the whole is greater than the sum of its parts in a surprising way, exist in systems like the stock market, Facebook, and the Billboard top 40 too!