Judea Pearl

Judea Pearl (born September 4, 1936) is an Israeli-American computer scientist and philosopher, best known for championing the probabilistic approach to artificial intelligence and the development of Bayesian networks (see the article on belief propagation).Pearl is currently a professor of computer science and statistics and director of the Cognitive Systems Laboratory at UCLA.[21] Judea Pearl is credited for "laying the foundations of modern artificial intelligence, so computer systems can process uncertainty and relate causes to effects."[2] He is one of the pioneers of Bayesian networks and the probabilistic approach to artificial intelligence, and one of the first to mathematize causal modeling in the empirical sciences.Pearl is described as "one of the giants in the field of artificial intelligence" by UCLA computer science professor Richard Korf.
Tel AvivMandatory PalestineTechnion – Israel Institute of TechnologyNew Jersey Institute of TechnologyRutgers UniversityNew York University Tandon School of EngineeringArtificial IntelligenceCausalityBayesian NetworksStructural Equation ModelingRuth PearlDanielIJCAI Award for Research ExcellenceTuring AwardRumelhart PrizeHarvey PrizeBBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge AwardComputer sciencestatisticsThesisDoctoral advisorRina DechterHector Geffnercomputer scientistphilosopherbelief propagationAssociation for Computing MachineryCausality: Models, Reasoning and InferenceThe Book of WhyDaniel PearlPakistanBritish Mandate for PalestinePolish JewishBnei BrakMenachem Mendel of KotzkIsrael Defense ForceskibbutzTechnionSRI InternationalPrinceton, New Jerseyparametric amplifierssemiconductorsSchool of EngineeringNGO MonitorYisrael Meir LauWall Street JournalDaniel Pearl FoundationChief RabbiJonathan SacksJudaismkiddushprobabilisticcognitive modelphilosophy of scienceknowledge representationnonstandard logicsStuart J. RussellCausality: Models, Reasoning, and InferenceNational Jewish Book AwardThe Book of Why: The New Science of Cause and EffectCarnegie Corporation of New YorkGreat Immigrants AwardsFellow of the American Statistical AssociationYale UniversityNational Academy of SciencesWayback MachineIEEE Intelligent SystemsLakatos AwardNational Academy of EngineeringRCA LaboratoriesHistory of the Jews in Los AngelesUniversity of California, Los AngelesA.M. Turing AwardEscobar, PepeAsia Times OnlineCommunications of the ACMChicago TribuneYouTubeThe Wall Street JournalIsrael National NewsNew YorkMathematics Genealogy ProjectThe Science NetworkFridman, LexA. M. Turing AwardlaureatesAlan PerlisMaurice Vincent WilkesRichard HammingMarvin MinskyJames H. WilkinsonJohn McCarthyEdsger W. DijkstraCharles BachmanDonald KnuthAllen NewellHerbert A. SimonMichael O. RabinDana ScottJohn BackusRobert W. FloydKenneth E. IversonTony HoareEdgar F. CoddStephen CookKen ThompsonDennis RitchieNiklaus WirthRichard KarpJohn HopcroftRobert TarjanJohn CockeIvan SutherlandWilliam KahanFernando J. CorbatóRobin MilnerButler LampsonJuris HartmanisRichard E. StearnsEdward FeigenbaumRaj ReddyManuel BlumAmir PnueliDouglas EngelbartJim GrayFred BrooksAndrew YaoOle-Johan DahlKristen NygaardRon RivestAdi ShamirLeonard AdlemanAlan KayVint CerfBob KahnPeter NaurFrances AllenEdmund M. ClarkeE. Allen EmersonJoseph SifakisBarbara LiskovCharles P. ThackerLeslie G. ValiantShafi GoldwasserSilvio MicaliLeslie LamportMichael StonebrakerMartin HellmanWhitfield DiffieTim Berners-LeeJohn L. HennessyDavid PattersonYoshua BengioGeoffrey HintonYann LeCunEd CatmullPat HanrahanAlfred AhoJeffrey UllmanJack DongarraRobert MetcalfeAvi Wigderson