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Information Resources Management Association
Advancing the Concepts & Practices of Information Resources Management in Modern Organizations

Ali Al Mazari

Ali Al Mazari is an Australian Jordanian Scientist, with more than 18 years of Teaching, Training, Research and Consultation experience in Information & Communication Technologies (ICT) applied sciences and multidisciplinary domains, as well as Business Leadership and Management. Dr. Al Mazari earned his PhD in Science from the School of Information Technologies, Sydney University in Australia, early 2007, Master of Computing (Major in IT) from the School of Computing, Western Sydney University, Australia, 2001, Master of Leadership & Management in Education, Newcastle University, Australia, 2010, and received his Bachelor of Science in Mathematics and Computer Science, Jordan, 1994. Dr. Al Mazari was working as a Post-Doctoral Biomedical Informatics Researcher, at the School of Information Technologies, the University of Sydney, on investigating research issues in Bioinformatics and Biomedical Informatics (2007 to 2009). Dr. Al Mazari research activities were also taken place at the National ICT Australia (Centre of Excellence) (NICTA), produced Technical Reports and Research Seminars with audiences from many disciplines including ICT, bioinformatics, biostatistics, clinical immunology, molecular biology and machine learning (2006 to 2009). Dr. Al Mazari’s science-oriented research experience and interests are in the areas of computational biology, Bioinformatics, life sciences and the development of algorithms and models for biomedical applications and problems, and in the area of Information Security and Cybercrime. Dr. Al Mazari’s doctorate research focused on the application of computational methods for the analysis of HIV drug resistance dynamics. His contributions focus on developing algorithms, models, data mining and machine learning tools for the understanding of HIV/AIDS evolutionary behaviours and enabling further insights into understanding the trends of immunological and virological changes with reference to HIV viral evolution and behaviour.
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