Adam I. Juda

Welcome to the Site of Adam Juda, currently a VP of Product Management at Google, previously a PhD student at Harvard.

Introduction

Hi there! This space is intended to be a more lasting resource for those who may be interested in my prior research.

I am currently employed as a VP of Product Management at Google, based out of their New York office.

Academia

In June 2007, I received a Ph.D. in Information, Technology and Management, a program offered jointly by the Harvard Business School (HBS ITM Site) and Harvard's School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS ITM Site).

My dissertation explores a variety of tensions at the intersection of computational mechanism design assumptions and ``the real world,'' proposing some novel solutions along the way. My co-advisors were Professors David C. Parkes (chair, SEAS) and Pai-Ling Yin (Sloan), with Professor Barbara J. Grosz a dissertation committee member.

The following is my one-page resume in pdf and ps formats (only current through my Harvard graduation).

Research Interests

E-commerce, Mechanism Design, Market Design, Game Theory, Bidding behavior on eBay, Software testing and Networks.

Publications

  • Pricing guidance in ad sale negotiations: the PrintAds example. Adam I. Juda, S. Muthukrishnan, and Ashish Rastogi. In the Proc. of the Third International Workshop on Data Mining and Audience Intelligence for Advertising (ADKDD '09). ACM Press, 2009.

  • An Options-Based Solution to the Sequential Auction Problem. Adam I. Juda and David C. Parkes. Artificial Intelligence. Elsevier B.V., 2009.

  • The Sequential Auction Problem on eBay: An Empirical Analysis and a Solution. Adam I. Juda and David C. Parkes. In the Proc. of the 7th ACM conference on Electronic Commerce (EC '06), pages 180-189. ACM Press, 2006.

  • TBBL: A Tree-Based Bidding Language for Iterative Combinatorial Exchanges. Ruggiero Cavallo, David C. Parkes, Adam Juda, Adam Kirsch, Alex Kulesza, Sebastien Lahaie, Benjamin Lubin, Loizos Michael, and Jeffrey Shneidman. IJCAI-05 Multidisciplinary Workshop on Advances in Preference Handling, Edinburgh, Scotland, 2005.

  • ICE: An Iterative Combinatorial Exchange. David C. Parkes, Ruggiero Cavallo, Nick Elprin, Adam Juda, SĂ©bastien Lahaie, Benjamin Lubin, Loizos Michael, Jeffrey Shneidman, and Hassan Sultan. In the Proc. of the 6th ACM conference on Electronic Commerce (EC '05), pages 249-258. ACM Press, 2005.

  • An Options-Based Method to Solve the Composability Problem in Sequential Auctions. Adam I. Juda and David C. Parkes. LNAI: Agent Mediated Electronic Commerce VI. Springer-Verlag, 2004.

  • Mechanisms for Options: Solving the Composability Problem. Adam I. Juda and David C. Parkes. In the Proc. AAMAS Workshop on Agent Mediated Electronic Commerce (AMEC VI), New York, USA 2004.

  • A Network of Invention. Lee Fleming and Adam Juda. Harvard Business Review 82, no. 4, April 2004.

  • Small Worlds and Regional Innovative Advantage. Lee Fleming, Adam Juda, and Charles King III. Harvard Business School Working Paper Series, No. 04-008, 2003.

Teaching

Teaching Fellow for BS 2140, Information and Network Economics, Spring 2003.

Misc

Many of the current students in the ITM program are working on very interesting projects, as are students in the Economics and Computer Science Research Group (EconCS).

Finding me on the web

LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/adamjuda

Academic Genealogy: https://academictree.org/computerscience/tree.php?pid=176598