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Justin Zobel is an Australian computer scientist and working in information retrieval, search engine technology, and research evaluation. He is a Redmond Barry Distinguished Professor in the School of Computing and Information Systems at the University of Melbourne and serves as Pro Vice-Chancellor for Graduate & International Research. [1] [2]
Zobel received his Ph.D. in computer science from the University of Melbourne in 1991. His doctoral research was in type theory for logic programming. [3] Following his Ph.D., he held academic appointments at RMIT University, where he was part of the team that developed an open-source search engines, MG. His work at RMIT contributed to the development of scalable methods for indexing and searching large text collections. [4]
Zobel later returned to the University of Melbourne, where he was appointed professor and subsequently Redmond Barry Distinguished Professor. [5] He has served in administrative roles including Head of the School of Computing and Information Systems and currently as Pro Vice-Chancellor for Graduate & International Research. [6] His has published books Writing for Computer Science [7] and How to Write a Better Thesis, co-authored with David Evans and Paul Gruba. [ citation needed ]
Zobel's research has primarily focused on information retrieval, text indexing, search engine architecture, and data compression. He has contributed to the development of efficient, scalable algorithms for managing and searching large-scale textual data. He has collaborated with Alistair Moffat and others on inverted indexes, similarity measures, and compression techniques. [8] [9] He has worked on MG and later Zettair, text retrieval systems designed for high performance on modest hardware.[ citation needed ] He has also explored self-indexing, dynamic tries, and burst tries as innovative approaches to managing large string datasets. [10]
Zobel was elected a Fellow of the ACM in 2025 and a Fellow of CORE (the Computing Research and Education Association of Australasia) in the same year. In 2022, he was inducted into the SIGIR Academy. [11] He is also a recipient of the CORE Distinguished Service Award (2016) for his sustained contributions to computing research in Australasia. [12]