Alkymi
Mrinal Jain has a diverse background in data science and machine learning. Mrinal is currently working as a Data Scientist at Alkymi since 2023. Previously, they were a Machine Learning Engineer at Ephesoft, Inc. from 2021 to 2023. In this role, they developed a table structure recognition system to extract tabular data from invoices and significantly improved its accuracy. Before that, Mrinal worked as a Machine Learning Intern at PepsiCo in 2020, where they trained a Word2Vec-like model on customer product baskets and evaluated the learned representations. Mrinal also has experience as a Data Science Intern at Noodle.ai in both 2019 and 2018, where they developed frameworks, benchmark suites, and data preprocessing pipelines for various projects. In 2017, they worked as a Data Science Intern at Noodle.ai, where they developed tools to extract and preprocess data from the Global Database of Events, Language, and Tone (GDELT).
Mrinal Jain completed their Master of Science (MS) in Data Science at NYU Center for Data Science from 2019 to 2021. Prior to that, they obtained a Bachelor of Technology (B.Tech.) degree in Information Technology from Vellore Institute of Technology between 2015 and 2019. In their senior secondary education, Mrinal attended Modern School from 2013 to 2015. Mrinal completed their high school education at Rani Laxmibai Public School, Jhansi (UP) from 2000 to 2013.
Mrinal also holds several additional certifications. In 2018, they completed the courses "Structuring Machine Learning Projects," "Improving Deep Neural Networks: Hyperparameter tuning, Regularization and Optimization," and "Neural Networks and Deep Learning" from Coursera. In 2017, they obtained a Machine Learning Engineer Nanodegree from Udacity.
Alkymi
Alkymi Data Inbox breaks the unstructured data logjam in enterprises by automatically freeing data from email and documents to drive real time decisions and action. The company was founded in 2017 in New York City by a founding team from Bloomberg, Two Sigma, and x.ai with backing from Canaan, Work-Bench, SimCorp, and industry insiders.