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  1. Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Toronto, 20192021. Ph.D. in Chemistry, Florida State University, 2018. M.S. in Chemistry, Florida State University, 2016. B.S. in Chemistry, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, 2013.

  2. Lecturer. 5116 Etcheverry Hall. University of California, Berkeley. Berkeley, CA 94720-1740. gomes@berkeley.edu. (510) 910-6823. For more information see: Current Classes Taught.

  3. Gabe Gomes. Assistant Professor, Department {Chemistry | ChemE | ML}, Carnegie Mellon University. Verified email at cmu.edu - Homepage. machine learning autonomous science catalysis digital chemistry automated labs. Title. Sort. Sort by citations Sort by year Sort by title.

  4. Assistant Professor, Chemical Engineering. Contact. Bio. Gomes' research rests at the interface between machine learning and organic chemistry, where he aims to develop new platforms for autonomous reaction discovery, with emphasis on catalysis. Education.

  5. executive.berkeley.edu › faculty-directory › gabriel-gomesGabriel Gomes | Berkeley Exec Ed

    Gabriel Gomes is a researcher and lecturer with the Mechanical Engineering Department and the Institute of Transportation Studies at UC Berkeley. He received a doctorate degree in automatic control theory in 2004 from UC Berkeley.

  6. Oct 15, 2024 · View the Carnegie Mellon University profile of Gabriel Gomes. Including their publications, professional activities and teaching activities.

  7. Dec 28, 2013 · View the Carnegie Mellon University profile of Gabriel Gomes. Including their publications, professional activities and teaching activities.

  8. Jun 28, 2022 · View the Carnegie Mellon University profile of Gabriel Gomes. Including their publications, professional activities and teaching activities.

  9. Gabriel GOMES | Cited by 1,497 | of University of California, Berkeley, CA (UCB) | Read 54 publications | Contact Gabriel GOMES

  10. Dr. Gabriel Gomes is a control systems engineer with expertise in the areas of traffic modeling, simulation, and control. He earned his doctorate degree in controls at U.C. Berkeley in 2004 where his research focused on developing ramp metering strategies for the I210 corridor.