My CV in official (long-winded) GT format is here.

About Amy Bruckman

Amy Bruckman is Regents' Professor and Senior Associate Chair in the School of Interactive Computing at the Georgia Institute of Technology. She does research on social computing, with interests in collaboration, content moderation, social movements, and internet research ethics.

Bruckman received her Ph.D. from the MIT Media Lab's Epistemology and Learning group in 1997, her M.S. from the Media Lab's Interactive Cinema Group in 1991, and a B.A. in physics from Harvard University in 1987. In 1999, she was named one of the 100 top young innovators in science and technology in the world (TR100) by Technology Review magazine. In 2002, she was awarded the Jan Hawkins Award for Early Career Contributions to Humanistic Research and Scholarship in Learning Technologies.

Bruckman is a Fellow of the ACM and a member of the ACM SIGCHI Academy. She currently serves on the ACM New Publications Committee. She contributed to the 2018 update to the ACM Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct.



My book Should You Believe Wikipedia? will be published by Cambridge University Press in 2022.

I occasionally blog on Medium. Older posts are on Wordpress.



A note for prospective students: My earlier work was about applications of social computing technology to education. I am no longer doing education-related work. I do not sponsor students for summer internships unless they attend Georgia Tech.

A note for journal editors and administrators looking for tenure letter writers: I am not current on the education literature any more, and am unable to review education papers or write promotion or tenure letters for education candidates.