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Biographical sketch:
John McCarthy is Professor of Computer Science at Stanford
University. He has been interested in artificial intelligence since
1948 and coined the term in 1955. His main artificial intelligence
research area has been the formalization of common sense knowledge.
He invented the LISP programming language in 1958, developed the
concept of time-sharing in the late fifties and early sixties, and has
worked on proving that computer programs meet their specifications
since the early sixties. He invented the circumscription method of
non-monotonic reasoning in 1978.
His main research (1995) is formalizing common sense knowledge and
reasoning. His articles are on
John McCarthy's main web page.
McCarthy received the A. M. Turing award of the Association for
Computing Machinery in 1971 and was elected President of the American
Association for Artificial Intelligence for 1983-84 and is a Fellow of
that organization. He received the first Research Excellence Award of
the International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence in 1985,
the Kyoto Prize of the Inamori Foundation in November 1988, and the
National Medal of Science in 1990. He is a member of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering and
the National Academy of Sciences. He has received honorary degreees
from Linkoping University in Sweden, the Polytechnic University of
Madrid, Colby College, Trinity College, Dublin and Concordia
University in Montreal, Canada. He has been declared a Distinguished Alumnus
by the California Institute of Technology.
BORN:
September 4, 1927 in Boston, Massachusetts
EDUCATION:
High School Diploma - Belmont High School, Los Angeles, 1943
B.S. (Mathematics) California Institute of Technology, 1948
Ph.D. (Mathematics) Princeton University, 1951
HONORS AND SOCIETIES:
American Academy of Arts and Sciences
American Society for the Advancement of Science
American Mathematical Society
Association for Computing Machinery
Sigma Xi
Sloan Fellow in Physical Science, 1957-59
ACM National Lecturer, 1961
A. M. Turing Award from Association for Computing Machinery, 1971
Editorial Board, Artificial Intelligence Journal, 1975 - present
Academic Advisor, National Legal Center for Public Information, 1976 - 1980
Board of Directors, Information International, Inc., 1962--1995.
Board of Directors, Inference Corporation, 1983--1991.
Board of Directors, Mad Intelligent Systems, 1987--1991
Sigma Xi National Lecturer, 1977
Fellow, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, 1979--1980.
President, American Association for Artificial Intelligence, 1983--84
Research Excellence Award, International Joint Conference on Artificial
Intelligence, 1985
Elected to National Academy of Engineering, 1987
Kyoto Prize, 1988
Elected to National Academy of Sciences, 1989
National Medal of Science, 1990
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE:
Procter Fellow, Princeton University, 1950-51
Higgins Research Instructor in Mathematics,
Princeton University, 1951--53
Acting Assistant Professor of Mathematics,
Stanford University, Sept. 1953 - Jan. 1955
Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Dartmouth
College, Feb. 1955 - June 1958
Assistant Professor of Communication Science,
M.I.T., 1958 - 1961
Associate Professor of Communication Science,
M.I.T., 1961 - 1962
Professor of Computer Science
Stanford University, 1962 - present
Director, Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
Stanford University, 1965 - 1980
Charles M. Pigott Professor of Engineering, Stanford University,
1987-1994
Bobby R. Inman Professor of Computer Science, University of Texas,
Fall 1987