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Feigenbaum, Edward A.
The Stanford Heuristic Programming Project: Goals and Activities
Buchanan, Bruce G., Feigenbaum, Edward A.
Shakey: From Conception to History
Kuipers, Benjamin (University of Michigan) | Feigenbaum, Edward A. (Stanford University) | Hart, Peter E. (Ricoh Innovations) | Nilsson, Nils J. (Stanford University)
hakey the Robot, conceived fifty years ago, was a seminal contribution to AI. Shakey perceived its world, planned how to achieve a goal, and acted to carry out that plan. This was revolutionary. At the Twenty-Ninth AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, attendees gathered to celebrate Shakey, and to gain insights into how the AI revolution moves ahead. The celebration included a panel, chaired by Benjamin Kuipers and featuring AI pioneers Ed Feigenbaum, Peter Hart, and Nils Nilsson. This article includes written versions of the contributions of those panelists.
Happy Silver Anniversary, AI!
Feigenbaum, Edward A.
Artificial intelligence (AI), on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its naming, is a "kid, finally grown up." In this letter to his field, Feigenbaum recounts AI's stumbles and successes, its growing pains and maturation, to a place of preeminence among the sciences; standing with molecular biology, particle physics, and cosmology as owners of the best questions of science.
Stories of AAAI -- Before the Beginning and After: A Love Letter
Feigenbaum, Edward A.
This article provides a personal perspective, in three stories, on the origins of AAAI. In the first story, I explain the reasons justifying AAAI's existence. In the second story. In the second story, I recount some of the controvery over the name artificial intelligence, and explain why it was chosen as the new society's moniker. In the third story, I note that AI has not suffered from the applied versus research scism that has affected other societies. Finally, in the fourth story, I mention some of the early issues of finance.
In Memoriam: Robert Engelmore
Buchanan, Bruce G., Rindfleisch, Thomas C., Feigenbaum, Edward A.
Robert S. (Bob) Engelmore, who retired in 1998 He When the HPP's goal shifted to studying information Allan Terry's of Technology (later Carnegie Mellon University) Ph.D. dissertation and several publications and became a physics major. He had close grew out of this work. Working with crystallographers friendships with (later-to-be AI scientists) Professor Joseph Kraut and Dr. Steve Robert Lindsay and Ed Feigenbaum and Freer from the University of California at San roomed with Feigenbaum for six years of undergraduate Diego, Bob and Allan designed and implemented and graduate school. It graduate work, he met his future wife, Ellie, in was an ambitious project, involving sophisticated Pittsburgh. They were married in 1958.
Knowledge-Based Systems Research and Applications in Japan, 1992
Feigenbaum, Edward A., Friedland, Peter E., Johnson, Bruce B., Nii, H. Penny, Schorr, Herbert, Shrobe, Howard, Engelmore, Robert S.
Representatives of universities and businesses were chosen by the Japan Technology Evaluation Center to investigate the state of the technology in Japan relative to the United States. The panel's report focused on applications, tools, and research and development in universities and industry and on major national projects.
Knowledge-Based Systems Research and Applications in Japan, 1992
Feigenbaum, Edward A., Friedland, Peter E., Johnson, Bruce B., Nii, H. Penny, Schorr, Herbert, Shrobe, Howard, Engelmore, Robert S.
This article summarizes the findings of a 1992 study of knowledge-based systems research and applications in Japan. Representatives of universities and businesses were chosen by the Japan Technology Evaluation Center to investigate the state of the technology in Japan relative to the United States. The panel's report focused on applications, tools, and research and development in universities and industry and on major national projects.
In Memoriam: Arthur Samuel: Pioneer in Machine Learning
McCarthy, John, Feigenbaum, Edward A.
In Memoriam: Arthur Samuel: Pioneer in Machine Learning
McCarthy, John, Feigenbaum, Edward A.
From 1949 through the late required to have his research more didn't finish 1960s, he did the best work in making vigorously followed up on. He was the computers learn from their experience. Programs for playing games often and what would be required to In 1949, Samuel joined IBM's fill the role in artificial intelligence reach human-level intelligence. Poughkeepsie Laboratory, where he research that the fruit fly Drosophila Samuel's papers on machine learning worked on IBM's first stored program plays in genetics. Drosophilae are are still worth studying.