Terry Winograd
Terry Allen Winograd (Takoma Park, Maryland, 24 de fevereiro de 1946) é um cientista da computação estadunidense, professor da Universidade Stanford, e co-diretor do grupo de interação humano-computador de Stanford.[1] É conhecido nas áreas de filosofia da mente e inteligência artificial por seu trabalho sobre língua natural usando o programa SHRDLU.
Terry Winograd | |
---|---|
Conhecido(a) por | SHRDLU |
Nascimento | 24 de fevereiro de 1946 (78 anos) Takoma Park, Maryland |
Alma mater | Instituto de Tecnologia de Massachusetts |
Instituições | Universidade Stanford, Google |
É membro da Association for Computing Machinery desde 2009.[2] Recebeu o SIGCHI Lifetime Research Award de 2011.[3]
Obras
editar- 1972, Understanding Natural Language. Academic Press, New York.
- 1982, Language As A Cognitive Process, Volume 1, Syntax. Addison-Wesley.
- 1986, Understanding Computers and Cognition: A New Foundation for Design. (Com Fernando Flores) Ablex Publ Corp.
- 1992, Usability: Turning Technologies into Tools. (Com Paul S. Adler) Oxford University Press.
- 1996, Bringing Design to Software. ACM Press.
Referências
- ↑ Stanford HCI Group
- ↑ Terry Winograd - Award Winner Arquivado em 8 de setembro de 2010, no Wayback Machine.. Fellows.acm.org. Acessado em 12 de abril de 2016.
- ↑ Lifetime Achievement Award -- Terry Winograd
Ligações externas
editar- Oral history interview with Terry Allen Winograd Instituto Charles Babbage, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis—65-page interview describes his education, first in liberal arts at Colorado College and then in computer science and introduction to linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He discusses the work of Marvin Minsky and others in artificial intelligence. He describes his move to the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory and his additional linguistic research at Xerox PARC. Winograd compares the approach to artificial intelligence at MIT and Stanford. He describes his involvement with obtaining funding from the Information Processing Techniques Office of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
- Stanford HCI Group
- Terry Winograd's faculty page
- Interviewed by Morten Thanning Vendelø