Kira Radinsky

Kira Radinsky is a Ukraine-born Israeli computer scientist, inventor and entrepreneur, specializing in predictive data mining.[1][2]

She gained recognition after her software predicted the first in 130 years outbreak of cholera in Cuba. The prediction was made based on the pattern identified by mining of 150 years of data from various sources: in poor countries, floods within a year after a draught often follow by a cholera outbreak.[1] The disaster-prediction software was developed together with Eric Horvitz while she was an intern at the Microsoft Research during her Ph.D. work at the Technion.[1][3]

"I think the best way to predict the future is to create it. One of the things that we are doing right now is identifying the patterns, and when the patterns start, try to predict the next step. So, it can predict things that have a pattern. Random things? It’s a philosophical question. Do we even have random things? Or is it part of a pattern that we don’t have data for? So, if you believe there is no random thing and everything has a pattern, then AI can predict the future. We just need more data for that."

—Kira Radinsky, 2019.[4]

While working on her Ph.D. she co-founded company, SalesPredict, based on similar ideas, but with different algorithms (the intellectual property of her internship work belongs to Technion).[3] It was acquired by eBay Israel in 2016, where Kira Radinsky worked as chief scientist and the director of data science during 2016–2019.[5]

Since 2019 she is Chairwoman & Chief Technology Officer at the Diagnostic Robotics, Jerusalem, which she co-founded in 2017.[6]

She is also visiting professor at Technion teaching the applications of predictive data mining in medicine.[7]

She has co-authored over 10 patents and more than 40 peer-reviewed articles.[5]

Awards and recognition

  • 2016 selected as the "Woman of the Year" by Lady Globes magazine.[8]
  • 2015 Included into the Forbes "30 under 30" young innovators and entrepreneurs list [9]
  • 2013: Included into the MIT Technology Review's "35 Innovators Under 35" list[1]

References

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