- McLean VA, US Allison Abbott - Washington DC, US Matthew Horton - Arlington VA, US Emma Sagan - Washington DC, US Kevan Emmott - Arlington VA, US Christine Ann Berglund - Brooklyn NY, US Jason Ji - Reston VA, US Alexandra A. Colevas - Arlington VA, US Steven Quadros - New York NY, US Adnan Malik - Voorhees NJ, US Jared M. Alexander - Vienna VA, US Scott Golder - Columbia MD, US
Assignee:
Capital One Services, LLC - McLean VA
International Classification:
G06F 16/904 G06Q 40/00 G06F 3/0485 G06F 16/29
Abstract:
Provided, in an aspect, is a method for improved visualization of transaction data from a financial services computer network. The method includes receiving, at a computing device, a plurality of experience sets; presenting, on a display of the computing device, a graphical user interface (GUI); and updating the GUI in response to receiving a revision to the plurality of experience sets. Each experience set contains one or more transactions that relate to each other. The GUI includes a scrollable list having at least a portion of the experience set name for experience sets within a selected time period; and a calendar for the time period showing, for each day with at least one experience, a graphical element indicative of a total of all experience set amounts in that day.
Systems And Methods For Building Dynamic Interfaces
- McLean VA, US Jason Ji - Reston VA, US Alexandra A. Colevas - Arlington VA, US Steven Quadros - New York NY, US Adnan Malik - Voorhees NJ, US Jared M. Alexander - Vienna VA, US Scott Golder - Columbia MD, US Allison Abbott - Washington DC, US Matthew Horton - Arlington VA, US Emma Sagan - Washington DC, US Kevan Emmott - Arlington VA, US Christine Ann Berglund - Brooklyn NY, US
Assignee:
Capital One Services, LLC - McLean VA
International Classification:
G06F 9/451 G06K 9/00 G06F 9/445 G06F 3/0482
Abstract:
First data indicative of a first plurality of transactions by a user may be processed to generate first behavioral information describing the user. The first behavioral information may be displayed by an interactive user interface. A user input made in response to the first behavioral information may be received and analyzed to generate user preference information indicating a relationship between the first user input and the first behavioral information. Second data indicative of a second plurality of transactions by the user may be received and processed with the user preference information to generate second behavioral information describing the user. The second behavioral information may be displayed by the interactive user interface differently from the first behavioral information by the interactive user interface as a result of the processing of the second data and the user preference information together.
- McLean VA, US Allison Abbott - Washington DC, US Matthew Horton - Arlington VA, US Emma Sagan - Washington DC, US Kevan Emmott - Arlington VA, US Christine Ann Berglund - Brooklyn NY, US Jason Ji - Reston VA, US Alexandra A. Colevas - Arlington VA, US Steven Quadros - New York NY, US Adnan Malik - Voorhees NJ, US Jared M. Alexander - Vienna VA, US Scott Golder - Columbia MD, US
Assignee:
Capital One Services, LLC - McLean VA
International Classification:
G06F 17/30 G06F 3/0485 G06Q 40/00
Abstract:
Provided, in an aspect, is a method for improved visualization of transaction data from a financial services computer network. The method includes receiving, at a computing device, a plurality of experience sets; presenting, on a display of the computing device, a graphical user interface (GUI); and updating the GUI in response to receiving a revision to the plurality of experience sets. Each experience set contains one or more transactions that relate to each other. The GUI includes a scrollable list having at least a portion of the experience set name for experience sets within a selected time period; and a calendar for the time period showing, for each day with at least one experience, a graphical element indicative of a total of all experience set amounts in that day.
- McLean VA, US Jason Ji - Reston VA, US Alexandra A. Colevas - Arlington VA, US Steven Quadros - New York NY, US Adnan Malik - Voorhees NJ, US Jared M. Alexander - Vienna VA, US Scott Golder - Columbia MD, US Allison Abbott - Washington DC, US Matthew Horton - Arlington VA, US Emma Sagan - Washington DC, US Kevan Emmott - Arlington VA, US Christine Ann Berglund - Brooklyn NY, US
Assignee:
Capital One Services, LLC - McLean VA
International Classification:
G06Q 20/10 G06Q 20/08 G06Q 20/24 G06F 17/30
Abstract:
Provided, in an aspect, is a method for improved management of transaction data from a financial services computer network. The method includes receiving details for a first purchase, detecting that the first purchase is a trigger purchase, obtaining secondary details for the first purchase, receiving details for a later-made second purchase and additional purchases made between the first purchase and second purchase, and determining that the first purchase and the second purchase belong to the same experience set and that the additional intervening purchases do not belong to the same experience set as the first purchase and the second purchase.
- McLean VA, US Jason Ji - Reston VA, US Alexandra A. Colevas - Arlington VA, US Steven Quadros - New York NY, US Adnan Malik - Voorhees NJ, US Jared M. Alexander - Vienna VA, US Scott Golder - Columbia MD, US Allison Abbott - Washington DC, US Matthew Horton - Arlington VA, US Emma Sagan - Washington DC, US Kevan Emmott - Arlington VA, US Christine Ann Berglund - Brooklyn NY, US
Assignee:
Capital One Services, LLC - McLean VA
International Classification:
G06Q 40/02 G06F 17/30 G06F 15/18
Abstract:
Provided, in an aspect, is a system for managing transactions from a financial services computer network. The system has a scalable architecture, and includes a database, one or more processors, a plurality of experience matchers, and a transaction hub. Each experience matcher is associated with a different experience set type, and can receive a transaction list and return an identified experience set. The transaction hub can communicate with multiple experience matchers, and can receive experience sets from the matchers after sending them a list of transactions.
S&N Feb 2016 - Oct 2016
Fiber-Optic Installation Manager
Advanced Fiber-Optics Installation Feb 2016 - Oct 2016
Business Owner
Jjb D.c. Inc. Sep 2009 - Nov 2015
Manager and Lead Technician
Skills:
Management Leadership Project Management Sales Business Development Optical Fiber Customer Service Telecommunications Strategic Planning New Business Development Team Building Process Improvement Team Leadership Account Management Project Planning Business Strategy Training Negotiation Team Management Acceptance Testing Fiber Optics Troubleshooting Voip Contract Negotiation Program Management
The Married App - McLean, VA since 2012
Co-Founder & CTO
MITRE - McLean, VA since Jun 2011
Senior Software Systems Engineer
Booz Allen Hamilton Jul 2009 - Jun 2011
Consultant
Booz Allen Hamilton May 2007 - Nov 2008
Intern
Education:
The George Washington University 2009 - 2013
University of Virginia 2005 - 2009
Skills:
Java Software Development Javascript Android Mobile Applications Objective C Web Applications Css Jquery Git Android Development Software Engineering Ios Subversion Software Design Html Swift Android Studio Android Wear Google Glass Web Development Apple Watch Wearables Pebble
Awards:
The Excellence in Safety and Security Award Darrell Darnell, Senior Associate VP for Safety and Security at GWU I received an award for my "outstanding achievements in Safety and Security technology development". Over the past year, I developed GWU panic button apps for iPhone and Android for use by students and faculty on GWU campus in times of emergency. The apps allow users to send an alert to GWU campus dispatchers, which contains GPS location, name, number, and additional information. After the alert is sent, an emergency phone call is automatically made. The apps also allow submission of text, photo, or video tips of suspicious activity. Additionally, I developed a web application to interface with the apps and allow campus dispatchers to view and act on the alerts and tips. The system will be piloted with the ultimate goal of going live in the App Store and Google Play for public use.