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Felix Brandt is a professor of Algorithmic Game Theory in the School of Computation, Information and Technology at the Technical University of Munich (TUM). His research focuses on the mathematical and complexity-theoretic foundations of interactions among autonomous agents, with primary interests in algorithmic game theory and computational social choice, situated at the intersection of computer science, artificial intelligence, and economics.
After studying computer science and mathematics at TUM, Brandt earned his doctoral degree in 2003 with a dissertation on electronic auctions. He then held postdoctoral positions at Carnegie Mellon University and Stanford University before qualifying as a lecturer at Ludwig Maximilians University (LMU), where his professorship was supported by the German Research Foundation’s Heisenberg Program. Since 2012, he has also held a secondary appointment in the Department of Mathematics.
Brandt serves as Managing Editor of Social Choice and Welfare and Associate Editor of ACM Transactions on Economics and Computation, and previously served as Co-Editor of Games and Economic Behavior. His work has contributed foundational insights into fair division, voting, and collective decision-making.
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