E. Mark Gold

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E. Mark Gold (often written "E Mark Gold" without a dot,[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8] born January 25, 1936 in Los Angeles)[9]: vi  is an American physicist, mathematician, and computer scientist. He became well known for his article Language identification in the limit[10][2] which pioneered a formal model for inductive inference of formal languages, mainly by computers. Since 1999, an award of the conference on Algorithmic learning theory is named after him.[11][12]

Academic education[]

In 1956, he got a B.S. in mathematics from the California Institute of Technology, in 1958, he got a M.S. in physics from Princeton University.[9]: vi  In Jan 1965, got his Ph.D. from UCLA, supervised by Abraham Robinson.[13][9]: i [14][3]: 403 

Scientific career[]

In 1962 and 1963, he worked at Unified Science Associates, Pasadena, on physics problems.[15][16]: 695 [17] About in 1963, he turned to mathematics,[16]: 695  working for Lear Siegler,[16]: 695 [18]: 48 [3]: 395  the RAND Corporation,[10][2]: 447  Stanford University,[1] the Institute for Formal Studies, Los Angeles,[2]: 447  and the Oregon Research Institute.[19]: 731  About in 1973, he moved to Montreal University[20]: 621 [19]: 731 [4][5][6][7]: 302 [21]: 320  and about 1977 to Rochester University.[22]: 151 [7]: 302  In 1991, he published from Oakland.[8]: 25 

References[]

  1. ^ a b E Mark Gold (1966). Usage of natural language. Stanford, CA: Institute for Mathematical Studies in the Social Sciences, Stanford University. OCLC 77495388.
  2. ^ a b c d E Mark Gold (May 1967). "Language Identification in the Limit". Information and Control. 10 (5): 447–474. doi:10.1016/S0019-9958(67)91165-5.
  3. ^ a b c E Mark Gold (Jun 1971). "Universal goal-seekers". Information and Control. 18 (5): 395–403. doi:10.1016/S0019-9958(71)90474-8.
  4. ^ a b E Mark Gold (1973). Survey of available methodology for estimation of parameters defined by a cost criterion. Publication. 141. Montreal: Departement d'Informatique, Universite de Montreal. OCLC 14261813.
  5. ^ a b E Mark Gold (1973). Survey of methodology for estimating parameters defined by an objective function. Montreal. Université. Département d'Informatique. Publication. 141?. Montreal: Departement d'Informatique, Universite de Montreal. OCLC 14261800.
  6. ^ a b E Mark Gold (1974). Canonical system representation. Publication. 158. Montreal: Departement d'Informatique, Universite de Montreal. OCLC 14261838.
  7. ^ a b c E Mark Gold (Jun 1978). "Complexity of Automaton Identification from Given Data". Information and Control. 37 (3): 302–320. doi:10.1016/S0019-9958(78)90562-4.
  8. ^ a b E Mark Gold (Feb 1991). "Incremental reduction with nested constraints". ACM SIGPLAN Notices. 26 (2): 25–34. doi:10.1145/122179.122182. S2CID 2617711.
  9. ^ a b c E. Mark Gold (Jan 1965). Models of Goal-Seeking and Learning (Ph.D. thesis). UCLA dissertation, University Microfilms, Inc. 65–6031. UCLA. ProQuest 302181018.
  10. ^ a b E. Mark Gold (1964). Language identification in the limit (RAND Research Memorandum RM-4136-PR). RAND Corporation.
  11. ^ Important dates page for ALT'17
  12. ^ E.M. Gold Award Winners 1999–2012 at ALT'13
  13. ^ E. Mark Gold at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  14. ^ Also in the examination committee were John L. Barnes, Leo Breiman, Jacob Marschak, and Charles B. Tomkins; some of them might have been advisors.
  15. ^ E. Mark Gold (Mar 1962). "Simplified Vapor Plating of Tungsten". ARS Journal. 32 (3): 437.
  16. ^ a b c E. Mark Gold (Mar 1963). "Fabrication of Porous Tungsten Ionizers by Means of Vapor Plating". AIAA Journal. 1 (3): 695–696. Bibcode:1963AIAAJ...1..695G. doi:10.2514/3.1615.
  17. ^ E. Mark Gold (May 1963). "Error in Hall Cell Angle Measurement Due to Magnet Edge Effects". Journal of Applied Physics. 34 (5): 1424–1425. Bibcode:1963JAP....34.1424G. doi:10.1063/1.1729593.
  18. ^ E. Mark Gold (Mar 1965). "Limiting Recursion". Journal of Symbolic Logic. 30 (1): 28–48. doi:10.2307/2270580. JSTOR 2270580.
  19. ^ a b E. Mark Gold and Paul J. Hoffman (Oct 1973). "Principal Components Analysis for Virtually Unlimited Data Matrices". Educational and Psychological Measurement. 33 (3): 731–733. doi:10.1177/001316447303300329. S2CID 144590022.
  20. ^ E. Mark Gold (Sep 1972). "System identification via state characterization". Automatica. 8 (5): 621–636. doi:10.1016/0005-1098(72)90033-7.
  21. ^ E. Mark Gold (1978). "Deadlock Prediction: Easy and Difficult Cases". SIAM Journal on Computing. 7 (3): 320–336. doi:10.1137/0207027.
  22. ^ E. Mark Gold (Apr 1977). "Semantic Approach to Design fo Controller Languages and Hardware". In E. Morlet; D. Ribbens (eds.). Proc. International Computing Symposium (Liège). North-Holland. pp. 151–166.

External links[]

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