Menlo Park, California — Each year a small number of distinguished AI researchers are elected AAAI Fellows by the membership of AAAI for their unusual distinction in the profession and for their sustained contributions to the field for a decade or more.
The following individuals join this outstanding group of individuals in the AI field. (For a complete list of AI Fellows please see http://www.aaai.org/Awards/fellows-list.php.)
- Wolfram Burgard, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg
For significant contributions to mobile robot navigation and environment modeling. - William W. Cohen, Carnegie Mellon University and Google
For significant contributions to many aspects of the theory and practice of machine learning. - Andrew K. McCallum, University of Massachusetts, Amhert
For significant contributions to the theory and application of information extraction, natural language processing, data mining, machine learning, and their integration. - Jeffrey S. Rosenschein, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
For significant contributions to multiagent systems, automated negotiation, voting mechanisms, and to bringing game-theoretic mechanism design into computer science. - Dan Roth, University of Illinois at Urbana/Champaign
For significant contributions to the foundations of machine learning and inference and to developing learning-centered solutions to natural language problems. - Daniela Rus, MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL)
For significant contributions to the theory and practice of distributed robotics, agents, and sensor networks. - Robert E. Schapire, Princeton University
For significant contributions to machine learning, including the theory and practice of boosting. - Venkatramanan Siva Subrahmanian, University of Maryland, College Park
For significant contributions to the study of probabilistic databases, logic programming and agent-based systems. - Pascal R. Van Hentenryck, Brown University
For significant contributions to constraint satisfaction and reasoning under uncertainty, the development of the widely used CHIP, Numerica, OPL, and Comet systems, and his pioneering role in the inception of constraint programming and its integration in operations research.
An official dinner and ceremony will be held in their honor during the IJCAI-09 Conference (http://www.ijcai-09.org) in Pasadena, California, USA later on in July.
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