
Biography
- Education
University of California, Santa Barbara
2012
Computer Science
PhDCalifornia State University, Channel Islands
2007
Computer Science
MSUCLA
2000
Chemistry
BS
- Research Interests
- Data Mining, Bioinformatics
Kathy Macropol is an Associate Professor of Computer Science at Arcadia University. She graduated with a BS in Chemistry from UCLA and an MS in Computer Science from CSU Channel Islands, before receiving a PhD in Computer Science from the University of California, Santa Barbara. Born and raised in Southern California, she moved to Pennsylvania and joined the faculty of Arcadia University in 2012.
Dr. Macropol's research focuses upon Data Mining and Bioinformatics, and especially the discovery of new techniques to model and mine large, time-evolving graphs. Some past and current projects include building methods to find new gene and protein functions from biological networks, creating systems to model and predict communication flow between people, finding new ways to analyze and predict changes of opinion (and "influence") inside social networks, and many more. Her projects have been published in multiple leading international conferences and journals, including VLDB and PKDD, and more information on her research publications can be found here.
In her spare time she enjoys anime and manga, watching Chinese and Korean period dramas, drawing, and playing video and computer games. She is also a huge fan of Ivan the Hamster Knight!
Publications
RRW: repeated random walks on genome-scale protein networks for local cluster discovery
BMC Bioinformatics
1970
Scalable Discovery of Best Clusters on Large Graphs
PVLDB
1970
Content-based Modeling and Prediction of Information Dissemination
ASONAM
1970
Function Annotation in Gene Networks
Functional Coherence of Molecular Networks in Bioinformatics eds. M Koyutürk, S Subramaniam, A Shankar, Springer Verlag
1970
Reachability Analysis and Modeling of Dynamic Event Networks
ECML PKDD
1970
I act, therefore I judge: Network sentiment dynamics based on user activity change
ASONAM
1970
Media Mentions
- Students Present on Music Generation at Computer Science Conference
- Computer Science Students Present at St. Joseph’s Research Symposium
- Faculty, Students Participate in Programming Contest and Conference
- Students Present at Research Symposium
- Mentoring Helps Turner ’20 Excel in Computer Science
- Arcadia Students, Faculty, and Staff to Show Off Creative Sides at 2025 Glenside Arts Festival