I is for Intelligence —Artificial of
course.
We used to eschew it, and with no remorse.
But times they have changed us, and now we embrace
AI as our own —but of course with good taste.
CS at Cornell was not into AI in the 60’s and 70’s. We didn’t
have the computers necessary to do AI, enticing excellent AI faculty
to our department was difficult, AI was a bit soft at the time, and we
limited our scope in order to do justice to the areas of most interest
to us. Also, not having AI gave us a reason to feel superior. In the
late 80’s and 90’s, we gradually moved into AI, and AI is
now our largest group. AI has been crucial to our move into multidisciplinary
work.
Joe Halpern is well known for his work on logics of knowledge —he
got a Gödel prize for some of it. Claire Cardie’s and Lillian
Lee’s research in sentiment classification and extraction has,
in large part, been responsible for a surge of interest in that field.
Rich Caruana and Thorsten Joachims, our machine-learning experts, have
leading roles in the KDD area. Carla Gomes and Bart Selman are known
for their work in constraint languages, logic formalisms, fast reasoning
methods, analysis of large linked networks, and the like; they do computational
complexity as well, and Selman and his colleagues have found a link between
computational complexity and phase transitions, as in water freezing.
Dan Huttenlocher and Ramin Zabih are our vision experts: Huttenlocher
has made fundamental contributions in object recognition, including Hausdorff-based
methods, and Zabih is helping the folks in medicine with vision problems.
Bob Constable, of course, is known 30 years of work in automated reasoning.
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