Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Andrew Barto

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American computer scientist and professor (born 1948)
For the boxer, seeAndre Berto.

Andrew Barto
Born
Andrew Gehret Barto

1948 (age 77–78)
EducationUniversity of Michigan (BS,MS,PhD)
AwardsIEEE Neural Networks Society Pioneer Award,IJCAI Award for Research Excellence,Turing Award (2024)
Scientific career
FieldsComputer science
InstitutionsUniversity of Massachusetts Amherst
ThesisCellular automata as models of natural systems (1975)
Doctoral advisorBernard P. Zeigler[1]
Doctoral students

Andrew Gehret Barto (born 1948) is an Americancomputer scientist who is professor emeritus ofcomputer science at theUniversity of Massachusetts Amherst. Barto is best known for his foundational contributions to the field of modern computationalreinforcement learning.[2]

Early life and education

[edit]

Andrew Gehret Barto was born in 1948.[3] He received his B.S. with distinction inmathematics from theUniversity of Michigan in 1970, after having initially majored in naval architecture and engineering. After reading work byMichael Arbib,Warren Sturgis McCulloch, andWalter Pitts, he became interested in using computers and mathematics to model the brain, and five years later was awarded a Ph.D. incomputer science for a thesis oncellular automata.[4]

Career

[edit]

In 1977, Barto joined the College of Information and Computer Sciences at theUniversity of Massachusetts Amherst as a postdoctoral research associate, was promoted to associate professor in 1982, and full professor in 1991. He was department chair from 2007 to 2011 and a core faculty member of the Neuroscience and Behavior program.[5]

During this time at UMass, Barto co-directed the Autonomous Learning Laboratory (initially the Adaptive Network Laboratory), which generated several key ideas in reinforcement learning.[5]Richard Sutton, with whom he co-authored the influential bookReinforcement Learning: An Introduction (MIT Press 1998; 2nd edition 2018),[5] was his PhD student.

Reinforcement learning

[edit]

When Barto started at UMass, he joined a group of researchers trying to explore the behavior of neurons in the human brain as the basis for human intelligence, a concept that had been advanced by computer scientistA. Harry Klopf. Barto was joined by his doctoral student Sutton in using mathematics toward furthering the concept and using it as the basis for artificial intelligence. This concept became known asreinforcement learning and went on to becoming a key part of artificial intelligence techniques.[6]

Barto and Sutton usedMarkov decision processes (MDP) as the mathematical foundation to explain how agents (algorithmic entities) made decisions when in a stochastic or random environment, receiving rewards at the end of every action. Traditional MDP theory assumed the agents knew all information about the MDPs in their attempt toward maximizing their cumulative rewards. Barto and Sutton's reinforcement learning techniques allowed for both the environment and the rewards to be unknown, and thus allowed for these category of algorithms to be applied to a wide array of problems.[7]

Barto built a lab in UMass Amherst toward developing the ideas on reinforcement learning while Sutton returned to Canada. Reinforcement learning as a topic continued to develop in academic circles until one of its first major real world applications saw Google'sAlphaGo program built on this concept defeating the then prevailing human champion.[6] Barto and Sutton have widely been credited and accepted as pioneers of modern reinforcement learning, with the technique itself being foundational to the modern AI boom.[8]

Barto published over one hundred papers or chapters in journals, books, and conference and workshop proceedings. He is co-author withRichard Sutton of the bookReinforcement Learning: An Introduction, MIT Press 1998 (2nd edition 2018), and co-editor with Jennie Si, Warren Powell, and Don Wunch II of theHandbook of Learning and Approximate Dynamic Programming, Wiley-IEEE Press, 2004.[9]

Awards and honors

[edit]

Barto is aFellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a Fellow and Senior Member of theIEEE,[10] and a member of theAmerican Association for Artificial Intelligence and theSociety for Neuroscience.[11]

Barto was awarded the UMass Neurosciences Lifetime Achievement Award in 2019, the IEEE Neural Network Society Pioneer Award in 2004,[12] and theIJCAI Award for Research Excellence in 2017. His citation for the latter read: "Professor Barto is recognized for his groundbreaking and impactful research in both the theory and application of reinforcement learning."[2]

In 2025, he received theTuring Award from theAssociation for Computing Machinery together with his former doctoral studentRichard S. Sutton for their work on reinforcement learning; the citation of the award read: "For developing the conceptual and algorithmic foundations of reinforcement learning."[6][13]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Barto, Andrew Gehret (1975).Cellular automata as models of natural systems (Thesis). University of Michigan.
  2. ^ab"IJCAI 2017 Awards". August 19, 2017. RetrievedSeptember 6, 2022.
  3. ^Barto, Andrew Gehret (1975).Cellular automata as models of natural systems (Thesis). University of Michigan.
  4. ^"Virtual History Interview". International Neural Network Society. January 7, 2022. RetrievedSeptember 6, 2022.
  5. ^abc"Andrew G. Barto". University of Massachusetts Amherst. February 17, 2008. Archived fromthe original on November 28, 2020. RetrievedOctober 18, 2020.
  6. ^abcMetz, Cade (March 5, 2025)."Turing Award Goes to 2 Pioneers of Artificial Intelligence".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedMarch 8, 2025.
  7. ^"A.M. Turing Award".amturing.acm.org. RetrievedMarch 8, 2025.
  8. ^"AI pioneers Andrew Barto and Richard Sutton win 2025 Turing Award for groundbreaking contributions to reinforcement learning | NSF – National Science Foundation".www.nsf.gov. March 5, 2025. RetrievedMarch 8, 2025.
  9. ^UMass Amherst: Department of Computer ScienceArchived September 2, 2006, at theWayback Machine
  10. ^"Barto elected IEEE fellow". University of Massachusetts Amherst. November 22, 2005. Archived fromthe original on December 3, 2019. RetrievedDecember 3, 2019.
  11. ^"CMU CS – AI Seminar".www.cs.cmu.edu. RetrievedMarch 7, 2025.
  12. ^""IEEE Computational Intelligence Society Past Recipients"". September 6, 2022. RetrievedSeptember 6, 2022.
  13. ^"Turing Awardees – Directorate for Computer and Information Science and Engineering (CISE) | NSF – National Science Foundation".www.nsf.gov. March 5, 2025. RetrievedMarch 8, 2025.

External links

[edit]
International
National
Academics
Other
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Andrew_Barto&oldid=1324190070"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp