Boris Katz
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (December 2011) |
Boris Katz | |
---|---|
Born | |
Alma mater | Moscow State University |
Known for | |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Computer Science |
Institutions | MIT |
Boris Katz (born October 5, 1947) is a principal American research scientist (computer scientist) at the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge and head of the Laboratory's .[1][2] His research interests include natural language processing and understanding, machine learning and . His brother Victor Kac is a mathematician at MIT.
He was able to get out of the USSR with the help of U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy, before the end of the cold war.[3][4][5][6]
Over the last several decades,[7] Boris Katz has been developing the that allows the user to access various types of information using English.
Biography[]
Boris Katz was born on October 5, 1947, in Chișinău in the family of Hersh Katz (died 1976) and Hayki (Klara) Landman (born 1921, Lipcani, Briceni District - died 2006, Cambridge, Middlesex County), who moved from Lipcani, a town located in the northern Bessarabian to Chișinău before the war. He graduated from Moscow State University and in November 1978, he left for the United States thanks to the personal intervention of Senator Edward M. Kennedy.[8] He defended his thesis as a candidate of physical and mathematical sciences in 1975 under the supervision of Evgenii M. Landis.
He currently lives in Boston and heads the InfoLabresearch team at the Laboratory of Informatics and Artificial Intelligence at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Boris Katz is the creator of the (since 1993 - on the Internet), the author of several works in the field of processing, generation and perception of natural languages, machine learning, and accelerated access to multimedia information.[9]
Family[]
Brothers - Victor Gershevich Katz, American mathematician, professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Mikhail Gershevich Katz, Israeli mathematician, graduate of Harvard and Columbia (Ph.D., 1984) universities, professor at Bar-Ilan University, author of the monograph "Systolic Geometry and Topology" (Mathematical Surveys and Monographs, vol. 137. American Mathematical Society: Providence, 2007).[10]
Daughter - Luba Katz, a bioinformatics scientist (her husband is Alan Jasanoff, a neuroimaging scientist, a professor at MIT, the son of Harvard University professors Jay Jasanoff and Sheila Jasanoff[11]).[12][13]
Past works[]
- A Knowledge Entry System for Subject Matter Experts: The goal of SHAKEN project is to enable subject matter experts, without any assistance from AI technologists, to assemble the models of processes and mechanisms so that questions about them can be answered by declarative inference and simulation.[14]
- Exploiting lexical regularities in designing natural language systems
- Word sense disambiguation for information retrieval
- HIKE (HPKB integrated knowledge environment)- a query interface and integrated knowledge environment for HPKB
- Quantitative evaluation of passage retrieval algorithms for question answering
- Sticky notes for the semantic web
- Question answering from the web using knowledge annotation and knowledge mining techniques
- The role of context in question answering systems
References[]
- ^ Boris Katz
- ^ The Brains Behind Watson
- ^ Clara Katz; Soviet émigré saved ailing granddaughter
- ^ Клара (Хайка) Ландман-Кац (1921—2006), некролог в The Boston Globe
- ^ Littlest refusenik on Kennedy: He saved my life Archived September 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Soviet Family Coming to U.S. (Beaver County Times)
- ^ "The START Natural Language Question Answering System". start.csail.mit.edu. Retrieved 2016-11-05.
- ^ Katz Family Re-United After 3 Years
- ^ Библиография Б. Г. Каца
- ^ Mikhail или Michal Katz
- ^ Его сестра Майя — историк, профессор .
- ^ Luba Katz, PhD
- ^ It Runs in the Family
- ^ "A Knowledge Entry System for Subject Matter Experts". Artificial Intelligence Center. SRI International. Retrieved 2013-06-13.
External links[]
- 1947 births
- Living people
- Scientists from Chișinău
- Moldovan Jews
- Bessarabian Jews
- Soviet emigrants to the United States
- Computational linguistics researchers
- Artificial intelligence researchers
- Moscow State University alumni
- Natural language processing researchers