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Mark Handley received his BSc in Computer Science with Electrical Engineering from UCL in 1988. As a PhD student at UCL, he studied novel neural network models and their visualisation. Since 1991, he has been a Research Fellow, working on the RACE CAR multimedia conferencing project and on MICE. His current research interests include Multimedia Systems (especially audio and video encoding and compression), Distributed and Heterogeneous Systems, HCI and graphics.
Peter Kirstein received a B.Sc in Maths and EE from Cambridge U, Ph.D in EE from Stanford U., and D.Sc from London U in EE. He worked at Stanford U, the Centre of European Nuclear Research (CERN) in Geneva, and the US General Electric, in Zurich. He is now Professor and Head of the Department of Computer Science at University College London. Professor Kirstein has been leading research projects in computer communications networks, telematic services, security and multimedia for over 20 years. His current research projects include the PARADISE project in piloting directory services, the PASSWORD and other projects in secured document services, the PODASAX project in ODA applications and databases, and the MICE project in multimedia services. Professor Kirstein is a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, the British Computer Society, the Institute of Physics, and the Institution of Electrical Engineering.
Angela Sasse has been a lecturer in the department of Computer Science at UCL since 1990. Her main areas of teaching and research are Human-Computer Interaction, Multimedia Systems and Computer-Supported Collaborative Work (CSCW), and she is involved in a number of Distance Teaching and Learning activities. Prior to MICE, she worked on the RACE CAR project, particularly on usability issues of multimedia conferencing systems.