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Geoffrey Everest Hinton (born 6 December 1947) is a British-Canadian computer scientist, cognitive scientist, cognitive psychologist, and Nobel Prize winner in Physics, known for his work on artificial neural networks which earned him the title as the "Godfather of AI". Hinton is University Professor Emeritus at the University of Toronto.
Geoffrey Hinton invented a method [the Boltzmann machine] that can autonomously find properties in data, and so perform tasks such as identifying specific elements in pictures.” ...
The original contribution in applying such energy-based models in cognitive science appeared in papers by Geoffrey Hinton and Terry Sejnowski. [ 17 ] [ 18 ] [ 19 ] In a 1995 interview, Hinton stated that in 1983 February or March, he was going to give a talk on simulated annealing in Hopfield networks, so he had to design a learning algorithm ...
It's the first time that a Nobel Prize has been awarded to the field of AI.
Geoffrey Hinton (pictured) and John Hopfield have been awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for their work on machine learning. (Ramsey Cardy - Sportsfile - Collision - Getty Images)
Rumelhart was the first author of a highly cited paper from 1985 [4] (co-authored by Geoffrey Hinton and Ronald J. Williams) that applied the back-propagation algorithm to multi-layer neural networks. This work showed through experiments that such networks can learn useful internal representations of data. The approach has been widely used for ...
Geoffrey Hinton, who has been called “the Godfather of AI,” sat down with 60 Minutes for Sunday’s episode to break down what artificial intelligence technology could mean for humanity in the ...
The ACM A. M. Turing Award is an annual prize given by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) for contributions of lasting and major technical importance to computer science. [2]