Email
claypool@wpi.edu
Office
FL B24a
Phone
+1 (508) 8315409
Affiliated Department or Office
Education
BA Mathematics Colorado College Magna Cum Laude 1990
MS Computer Science University of Minnesota 1993
PhD Computer Science University of Minnesota 1997

Mark Claypool has been a professor of Computer Science and Interactive Media Game Development at WPI since 1997. Mark has a B.A. in Mathematics from Colorado College and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science from the University of Minnesota. He has published over 100 peer-reviewed conference and journal papers and written two books on computer games. He has chaired several ACM conferences on networks, games and multimedia and served on the technical program committee for over 40 of them. His research interests include multimedia networking, congestion control, network games and information filtering.

Email
claypool@wpi.edu
Affiliated Department or Office
Education
BA Mathematics Colorado College Magna Cum Laude 1990
MS Computer Science University of Minnesota 1993
PhD Computer Science University of Minnesota 1997

Mark Claypool has been a professor of Computer Science and Interactive Media Game Development at WPI since 1997. Mark has a B.A. in Mathematics from Colorado College and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science from the University of Minnesota. He has published over 100 peer-reviewed conference and journal papers and written two books on computer games. He has chaired several ACM conferences on networks, games and multimedia and served on the technical program committee for over 40 of them. His research interests include multimedia networking, congestion control, network games and information filtering.

Office
FL B24a
Phone
+1 (508) 8315409

News

SEE MORE NEWS ABOUT Mark Claypool
Worcester Business Journal
WPI, UMass Lowell team to support $111K in research

The Worcester Business Journal reported on WPI and the University of Massachusetts Lowell partnering to award more than $111,000 in seed funding to six different teams, focusing on work ranging from human-robot collaboration to cancer detection and rehabilitation for stroke patients.