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2005 LSA Institute Linguistic Society of America
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Josh Tenenbaum received his Ph.D. in Brain and Cognitive Sciences from MIT in 1999. He was a member of the faculty at Stanford University from 1999-2002 as Assistant Professor of Psychology and (by courtesy) Computer Science. In 2002, he moved back to MIT as Assistant Professor of Computational Cognitive Science. He currently holds the Paul E. Newton Career Development Chair, and is also a Principal Investigator in MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. His research focuses on inductive learning and reasoning in humans and machines, with specific interests in constructing perceptual representations, learning concepts and word meanings, causal reasoning, coincidences and discovery, and the acquisition of intuitive theories.

Inductive Learning of Rules and Constraints | LSA.112
with Adam Albright
MW 4:50-6:30
Three Week Course | First Session