Gabriela Ochoa is a Venezuelan British computer scientist and Professor at the University of Stirling. Her research considers evolutionary algorithms and heuristic search methods.
Early life and education
Ochoa was born in Venezuela. Her grandfather was a doctor, and she became interested in science at an early age.[1] She earned her bachelor's degree at the Simón Bolívar University, where she remained for her master's degree and worked as a teacher's assistant.[1] She moved to the United Kingdom for her graduate studies, where she joined the University of Sussex as a doctoral student. At Sussex Ochoa worked on genetic algorithms with Hilary Buxton and Inman Harvey.[2] After graduating she returned to Venezuela, where she was made Associate Professor at the Simón Bolívar University.
Her research considers evolutionary algorithms and heuristic search methods.[4] She has worked on the computational design of medical treatments in an effort to minimise antibiotic resistance in Scotland.[5]
Supported by the Leverhulme Trust, Ochoa created the website Lon Maps, a space which looks to establish visualisation techniques for computational search spaces.[6] In 2020 Ochoa was awarded the EvoStar Award for Outstanding Contribution to Evolutionary Computation in Europe.[7][8]
Burke, Edmund K.; Hyde, Matthew; Kendall, Graham; Ochoa, Gabriela; Özcan, Ender; Woodward, John R. (2010), Gendreau, Michel; Potvin, Jean-Yves (eds.), "A Classification of Hyper-heuristic Approaches", Handbook of Metaheuristics, International Series in Operations Research & Management Science, vol. 146, Boston, MA: Springer US, pp. 449–468, doi:10.1007/978-1-4419-1665-5_15, ISBN978-1-4419-1665-5, retrieved 2020-09-22