Dave Cliff
Professor
Department of Engineering
University of Bristol
United Kingdom
Biography
Prior to joining the University of Bristol in 2007, I'd held faculty posts at the University of Sussex School of Cognitive and Computing Sciences, at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, and at the University of Southampton School of Electronics and Computer Science. I'd also spent roughly half my career working as a researcher in industry: initially for Hewlett-Packard Labs, where I ended up as a Department Scientist; and latterly for Deutsche Bank London, where I was a Director/Trader in their Foreign Exchange Complex Risk Group.
Research Interest
Her recent research has been focused on Ultra-Large-Scale Complex Software-Intensive Socio-Technical Systems in general, and Large Scale Complex IT Systems (LSCITS) in particular. Before She got involved in LSCITS research, She spent roughly 17 years doing research in complex adaptive systems of one type or another. She worked on modelling neuronal processing of visual information in airborne insects (hoverflies, actually); on using artificial evolution to generate designs for sensory-motor morphology and neuronal controllers for autonomous mobile robots (so-called "evolutionary robotics"); on competitive co-evolutionary dynamics in predator-prey "arms races"; on autonomous adaptive algorithmic trading strategies for double-acution markets; on automated crowd-responsiv
Publications
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Cartlidge, J & Cliff, D, 2013, ‘Comparison of Cloud Middleware Protocols and Subscription Network Topologies using CReST, the Cloud Research Simulation Toolkit’. in: F Desprez, D Ferguson, E Hadar, F Leymann, M Jarke, M Helfert (eds) CLOSER-2013: Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Cloud Computing and Services Science. SciTePress, Aachen, Germany, pp. 58-68
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Stotter, S, Cartlidge, JP & Cliff, D, 2014, ‘Behavioural investigations of financial trading agents using Exchange Portal (ExPo)’. in: N Nguyen (eds) Transactions on Computational Collective Intelligence XVII. Springer LNCS, pp. 22-45