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HBk,

FEIGENBAUM VITA

Startwd Unfwßfty Libnme6. Dept. <* Sp*c«* CoteoionsCo* wc3fo TWbBo* £2 Serie633Z£2ES>-Fol Fol. Title

CURRICULUM VITAE

EDWARD A. FEIGENBAUM

Computer Science DepartmentStanford University

August 15, 1977

Stanford, California 94305BORN

January 20, 1936, Weehawken, New Jersey

EDUCATION

Ph.D., Doctoral program in the Behavioral Sciences, Graduate School ofIndustrial Administration, Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh,Pennsylvania, September, 1959.

8.5., Electrical Engineering, Carnegie Institute of Technology, 1956.

EXPERIENCE

Stanford University, Stanford, California

Professor (by Courtesy), Department of Psychology, 1976-Chairman, Computer Science Department, 1976-Professor of Computer Science, 1 969—Associate Professor of Computer Science, 1965-68Director, Stanford Computation Center, 1965-68

University of California, Berkeley

Associate Professor, School of Business Administration, 1964-1965Assistant Professor, School of Business Administration, 1960-63Research Appointment, Center for Human Learning, 1961-64Research Appointment, Center for Research in Management Science,

1960-64

Editor, Computer Science Series, McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York, 1965

Member, Computer and Biomathematical Sciences Study Section, NationalInstitutes of Health, Bethesda, Md., 1968-72.

1

E. A. Feigenbaum Page 2

PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES

American Psychological Association,American Association for the Advancement of Science,Association for Computing Machinery (member of National Council of ACM,

1966-68)

CONSULTANTSHIPS

Information Sciences Institute of University of Southern CaliforniaThe RAND CorporationSystem Development Corporation (knowledge-based systems project)Systems Control Incorporated (HASP project)

BOOKS AND MONOGRAPHS

Computers and Thought, co-editor with Julian Feldman, McGraw-Hill, 1963.Information Processing Language V Manual. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-

Hall, 1961 (with A. Newell, F. Tonge, G. Mealy et al).

An Information Processing Theory of Verbal Learning, Santa Monica, The RANDCorporation Paper P-1817, October 1959 (Monograph).

PAPERS. 1965-

This list is organized by topic.

Heuristic DENDRAL Project

1. J. Lederberg and E. A. Feigenbaum, "Mechanization of Inductive Inferencein Organic Chemistry," in Formal Representations for Human Judgment , B.Kleinmuntz (ed), (Wiley, 1968). (Also Stanford Artificial IntelligenceProject Memo No. 54, August 1967, and Heuristic Programming Project Memo[11] HPP-67-3.)

2. E. A. Feigenbaum, G. Sutherland, and B. G. Buchanan, "Heuristic DENDRAL:A Program for Generating Explanatory Hypotheses in Organic Chemistry," inProceedings of the Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences,(B. K. Kinariwala and F. F. Kuo, eds), University of Hawaii Press,(1968). (Also, Stanford Heuristic Programming Project Memo [12] HPP-68--1.)

E. A. Feigenbaum Page 3

3- B. G. Buchanan, G. L. Sutherland, and E. A. Feigenbaum, "HeuristicDENDRAL: A Program for Generating Explanatory Hypotheses in OrganicChemistry," in Machine Intelligence 4 (B. Meltzer and D. Michie, eds),Edinburgh University Press (1969). (Also Stanford ArtificialIntelligence Project Memo No. 62, July 1968, and Heuristic ProgrammingProject Memo [14] HPP-68-3.)

4. E. A. Feigenbaum, "Artificial Intelligence: Themes in the Second Decade,"in Final Supplement to Proceedings of the IFIP 68 International Congress.Edinburgh, August 1968. (Also Stanford Artificial Intelligence ProjectMemo No. 67, August 1968, and Heuristic Programming Project Memo [15]HPP-68-4.)

5. J. Lederberg, G. L. Sutherland, B. G. Buchanan, E. A. Feigenbaum, A. V.Robertson, A. M. Duffield, and C. Djerassi, "Applications of ArtificialIntelligence for Chemical Inference I. The Number of Possible OrganicCompounds: Acyclic Structures Containing C, H, 0 and N." Journal of theAmerican Chemical Society, 91:11 (May 21, 1969). (Also StanfordHeuristic Programming Project Memo [22] HPP-69-6.)

6. A. M. Duffield, A. V. Robertson, C. Djerassi, B. G. Buchanan, G. L.Sutherland, E. A. Feigenbaum, and J. Lederberg, "Applications ofArtificial Intelligence for Chemical Inference 11. Interpretation of LowResolution Mass Spectra of Ketones." Journal of the American ChemicalSociety, 91:11 (May 21, 1969). (Also Stanford Heuristic ProgrammingProject Memo [23] HPP-69-7.)

7. B. G. Buchanan, G. L. Sutherland, E. A. Feigenbaum, "Toward anUnderstanding of Information Processes of Scientific Inference in theContext of Organic Chemistry," in Machine Intelligence 5, (B. Meltzer andD. Michie, eds) Edinburgh University Press (1970). (Also StanfordArtificial Intelligence Project Memo No. 99, September 1969, andHeuristic Programming Project Memo [18] HPP-69-2.)

8. J. Lederberg, G. L. Sutherland, B. G. Buchanan, and E. A. Feigenbaum, "AHeuristic Program for Solving a Scientific Inference Problem: Summary ofMotivation and Implementation," Stanford Artificial Intelligence ProjectMemo No. 104, (November, 1969) and Heuristic Programming Project Memo[20] HPP-69-4.

9. G. Schroll, A. M. Duffield, C. Djerassi, B. G. Buchanan, G. L.Sutherland, E. A. Feigenbaum, and J. Lederberg, "Applications ofArtificial Intelligence for Chemical Inference 111. Aliphatic EthersDiagnosed by Their Low Resolution Mass Spectra and NMR Data." Journal ofthe American Chemical Society, 91:26 (December 17, 1969). (Also StanfordHeuristic Programming Project Memo [25] HPP-69-9.)

E. A. Feigenbaum Page 4

10. A. Buchs, A. M. Duffield, G. Schroll, C. Djerassi, A. B. Delfino, B. G.Buchanan, G. L. Sutherland, E. A. Feigenbaum, and J. Lederberg,"Applications of Artificial Intelligence for Chemical Inference IV.Saturated Amines Diagnosed by Their Low Resolution Mass Spectra andNuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra." Journal of the American ChemicalSociety, 92, 6831, (1970). (Also Stanford Heuristic Programming Project[26] HPP-70-1.)

11. Y. M. Sheikh, A. Buchs, A. B. Delfino, G. Schroll, A. M. Duffield, C.Djerassi, B. G. Buchanan, G. L. Sutherland, E. A. Feigenbaum and J.Lederberg, "Applications of Artificial Intelligence for ChemicalInference V. An Approach to the Computer Generation of CyclicStructures. Differentiation Between All the Possible Isomeric Ketones ofComposition C6H100," Organic Mass Spectrometry, 4, 493, (1970). (AlsoStanford Heuristic Programming Project Memo [28] HPP-70-3.)

12. A. Buchs, A. B. Delfino, A. M. Duffield, C. Djerassi, B. G. Buchanan, E.A. Feigenbaum and J. Lederberg, "Applications of Artificial Intelligencefor Chemical Inference VI . Approach to a General Method of InterpretingLow Resolution Mass Spectra with a Computer," Chem. Acta Helvetica, 53,1394, (1970). (Also Stanford Heuristic Programming Project Memo [29]HPP-70-4.)

13. B. G. Buchanan, G. Sutherland, and E. A. Feigenbaum, "Rediscovering SomeProblems of Artificial Intelligence in the Context of Organic Chemistry,"Machine Intelligence 5., Edinburgh University Press, (1970). (AlsoStanford Heuristic Programming Project Memo [31] HPP-70-6.)

14. E. A. Feigenbaum, B. G. Buchanan, and J. Lederberg, "On Generality andProblem Solving: A Case Study Using the DENDRAL Program," in MachineIntelligence 6., B. Meltzer and D. Michie (eds), Edinburgh UniversityPress (1971). (Also Stanford Artificial Intelligence Project Memo No.131, Heuristic Programming Project Memo [30] HPP-70-5, and ComputerScience Memo STAN-CS-176. )

15. A. Buchs, A. B. Delfino, C. Djerassi, A. M. Duffield, B. G. Buchanan, E.A. Feigenbaum, J. Lederberg, G. Schroll, and G. L. Sutherland, "TheApplication of Artificial Intelligence in the Interpretation of Low-Resolution Mass Spectra," Advances in Mass. Sj^ecitrometry., 5, 314, (1971).(Also Stanford Heuristic Programming Project Memo [32] HPP-71-1.)

16. B. G. Buchanan, E. A. Feigenbaum, and J. Lederberg, "A HeuristicProgramming Study of Theory Formation in Science," in Proceedings of theSecond International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence,Imperial College, London (September, 1971). (Also Stanford ArtificialIntelligence Project Memo No. 145, and Heuristic Programming Project Memo[35] HPP-71-4.)

E. A. Feigenbaum Page 5

17. D. H. Smith, B. G. Buchanan, R. S. Engelmore, A. M. Duffield, A. Yeo, E.A. Feigenbaum, J. Lederberg, and C. Djerassi, "Applications of ArtificialIntelligence for Chemical Inference VIII. An Approach to the ComputerInterpretation of the High Resolution Mass Spectra of Complex Molecules.Structure Elucidation of Estrogenic Steroids," Journal of the AmericanChemical Society, 94 (1972), 5962-5971. (Also Stanford HeuristicProgramming Project Memo [37] HPP-72-1.)

18. B. G. Buchanan, E. A. Feigenbaum, and N. S. Sridharan, "Heuristic TheoryFormation: Data Interpretation and Rule Formation," in MachineIntelligence 7, Edinburgh University Press (1972). (Also StanfordHeuristic Programming Project Memo [38] HPP-72-2.)

19. D. H. Smith, B. G. Buchanan, W. C. White, E. A. Feigenbaum, C. Djerassiand J. Lederberg, "Applications of Artificial Intelligence for ChemicalInference X. Intsum. A Data Interpretation Program as Applied to theCollected Mass Spectra of Estrogenic Steroids." Tetrahedron, 29, 3117(1973). (Also Stanford Heuristic Programming Project Memo [44] HPP-73--2.)

20. E. A. Feigenbaum, "Computer Applications: Introductory Remarks," inProceedings of Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology33, 2331 (1974), also in Computers in Life Science Research (edited byWilliam Siler and Donald A. B. Lindberg) , Plenum Press, 49-51 (1975).(Also Stanford Heuristic Programming Project Memo [57] HPP-74-4.)

21. B. G. Buchanan, D. H. Smith, W. C. White, R. Gritter, E. A. Feigenbaum,J. Lederberg and C. Djerassi, "Applications of Artificial Intelligencefor Chemical Inference. XXII. Automatic Rule Formation in MassSpectrometry by Means of the Meta-DENDRAL Program." Journal of theAmerican Chemical Society, 98:6168, (1976). (Also Stanford HeuristicProgramming Project Memo [80] HPP-76-4.)

22. H. Penny Nii and Edward A. Feigenbaum, "Rule-based Understanding ofSignals," Proceedings oX the Conference on Pattern-directed InferenceSystems, (1977). (Also Stanford Heuristic Programming Project Memo [94]HPP-77-7, and Computer Science Department Memo STAN-CS-77-612. )

23. E. A. Feigenbaum, R. S. Engelmore, and C. K. Johnson, "A Correlationbetween Crystallographic Computing and Artificial Intelligence Research,"Afita. Cryst., A33 (Jan 1): 13-18, (1977). (Also Stanford HeuristicProgramming Project Memo [102] HPP-77-15.)

24. E. A. Feigenbaum, "The Art of Artificial Intelligence: I. Themes andcase studies of knowledge engineering," Proceedings of the IJCAI, (1977).(Also, Stanford Heuristic Programming Project Memo [112] HPP-77-25, andComputer Science Department Memo STAN-CS-77-621 . )

6E. A. Feigenbaum Page

Information Processing Model Building in Psychology

1 . "Information Processing" in Readiness to Remember: Proceedings of theThird Conference on Remembering, Learning, and Forgetting, Gordon andBreach (1972).

2. "Information Processing and Memory," Proceedings of the Fifth BerkeleySymposium on Mathematical Statistics and Probability, Volume 4 (Biologyand Health), University of California Press, 1967. Reprinted in Modelsfor Memory, D. Norman (ed), Academic Press (1971).

IFIP Congresses

1. Report on Panel on the Mechanization of Creative Processes. In Kalenich,W. (cd.), Proceedings of IFIP Congress 65, Volume 2, Spartan Books(1966), pp. 600-601.

2. Invited speech: "Artificial Intelligence: Themes in the Second Decade,"in Final Supplement to Proceedings of the IFIP 68 Congress. Edinburgh,(August 1968). Also available as A.I. Project Working Paper No. 67,(August 1968).

Stanford Computation Center

"Computers at Stanford," (with N. Nielsen). In Stanford Annual FinancialReport Summary, Stanford University, (November 1967). Reprinted in IBMComputing Report, Vol. IV, No. 3 (May, 1968), 15-18.

Other

"Soviet Computer Science, Revisited." Proceedings of the 20th ACM NationalConference, (August 1965), pp. 225-226.

Papers, Pre-1965: Available upon request.

E. A. Feigenbaum Page 7

Papers, Pre-1965:

1) "Memory Mechanisms and EPAM Theory: Monologue and Interchange at theFirst Conference on Remembering, Learning and Forgetting," published inKimble, D. (cd.), The Anatomy of Memory. Science and Behavior Books , PaloAlto, (1965).

2) "Studies in Information Processing Theory: Similarity andFamiliarity in Verbal Learning," The RAND Corp. RM-3979, Santa Monica, CA,(February, 1964). Also appeared as, "An Information-Processing Theory ofSome Effects of Similarity, Familiarization, and Meaningfulness in VerbalBehavior," Vol. 3, No. 5 (October 1964) (with H. A. Simon).

3) "Computer Simulation of Human Behavior," in Proceedings of the 1963Midwest Human Factors Society Symposium on Human Factors and Computers.

4) "Experiments with the EPAM Simulation of Verbal Learning," inSymposium on Simulation Models: Methodology and Applications to theBehavioral Sciences. (A. Hoggatt and F. E. Balderston, eds.), South-WesternPublishing Company, Cincinnati, Ohio, (1963) (with H. A. Simon).

5) "Brief Notes on the EPAM Theory of Verbal Learning," Verbal Behaviorand Learning— Problems and Processes, McGraw-Hill, (Cofer and Musgrave, eds.)(with H. A. Simon) .

6) "Artificial Intelligence," 1960-1962 Report to the 1963 Congress ofthe International Scientific Radio Union. Also in IRE Transactions onInformation Theory, (October 1963).

7) "A Theory of the Serial Position Effect," British Journal ofhology, 53 (August 1962), 307-320 (with H. A. Simon).

8) "An Experimental Course in Simulation of Cognitive Processes,"Behavioral Science, 7 (April 1962).

9) "Generalization of an Elementary Perceiving and Memorizing Machine,"The RAND Corp. Paper P-2555, (March 1962). Also in Proceedings of the SecondInternational Congress on Information Processing, Munich, Germany, (1962)(with H. A. Simon) .

10) "Soviet Cybernetics and Computer Science, 1960," Communications ofthe. Association for Computing Machinery, (December 1961). Also inTransactions of the IRE Professional Group on Electronic Computers, (December1961).

11) "Forgetting in an Association Memory," Preprints of the 1961National Conference of the Association for Computing Machinery, 15 (September1961) (with H. A. Simon).

8E. A. Feigenbaum Page

12) "The Distinctiveness of Stimuli," Psychological Review, 68 (July1961), 285-288 (with H. A. Simon).

13) "Performance of a Reading Task by an Elementary Perceiver andMemorizer," The RAND Corp. Paper P-2358 (July 1961). Also in BehavioralScience, (January 1963) (with H. A. Simon).

14) "The Simulation of Verbal Learning Behavior," Proceedings of the1961 Western Joint Computer Conference, 19 (May 1961), 191-229.

15) "Latent Motives, Group Discussion and the 'Quality' of GroupDecisions in a Nonobjective Decision Problem," Sociometry, 23 (March 1960),50-57 (with J. March) .

16) "Models in a Behavioral Theory of the Firm," Behavioral Science, 72(April, 1959), 597-599 (with R. Cyert and J. March).

f4jiM~l)

JUL 2 1978'A- FEIGENBAUM

Eleanor Bernert SheldonPresident

July 5, 1978

Dr. Edward A. FeigenbaumDepartment of Computer ScienceStanford UniversityStanford, California 94305

Dear Dr. Feigenbaum:

,At your request, the Committee on Problems"' aTrcKßolicyreluctantly agreed not to reappoint you for another year tot(he Committee on Mathematics in_the Sof-j^i Sciences. J^&Pas4v.ed me to forward its thanks for devoting your_Jt±rrte and toexpress the hope that the Council- may eall'oh' you again atsome point in the future.

Sincerely yours,

r i u>

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