The Computer Scientist Training AI to Think with Analogies
The Pulitzer Prize-winning book Gödel, Escher, Bach inspired legions of computer scientists in 1979, but few were as inspired as Melanie Mitchell. After reading the 777-page tome, Mitchell, a high school math teacher in New York, decided she "needed to be" in artificial intelligence. She soon tracked down the book's author, AI researcher Douglas Hofstadter, and talked him into giving her an internship. She had only taken a handful of computer science courses at the time, but he seemed impressed with her chutzpah and unconcerned about her academic credentials. Mitchell prepared a "last-minute" graduate school application and joined Hofstadter's new lab at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
Aug-7-2021, 23:30:04 GMT
- Country:
- Genre:
- Industry:
- Education
- Curriculum > Subject-Specific Education (0.89)
- Educational Setting (0.54)
- Education
- Technology: