Rina Dechter

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Rina Dechter
File:Rina Dechter.jpg
Residence Los Angeles, CA
Nationality USA, Israel
Fields Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence
Institutions University of California, Irvine
Alma mater UCLA (1985, PhD)
Weizmann Institute of Science (1978, MS)
Hebrew University of Jerusalem (1976, BS)
Doctoral advisor Judea Pearl
Website
www.ics.uci.edu/~dechter

Rina Dechter is a Professor of Computer Science in the Donald Bren School of Information and Computer Sciences at University of California, Irvine. Her research focuses on automated reasoning and constraint satisfaction in artificial intelligence.[1][2] In 2013, she was elected a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery.[3]

Education

Dechter received her B.S in Mathematics and Statistics from Hebrew University in 1973, her M.S. in Applied Mathematics from the Weizmann Institute in 1976, and her Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1985 as a student of Judea Pearl.[4][5]

Academic career and research

Dechter was a senior lecturer in computer science at the Technion from 1988 to 1990, after which she moved to the University of California, Irvine, where she became a full professor in 1996.[4] She was a Radcliffe Fellow at Harvard University's Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study from 2005 to 2006.[6] She is the co-editor in chief of the scientific journal Artificial Intelligence Journal,[7] a position to which she was elected in 2011.[4]

Dechter wrote a standard text in constraint programming called Constraint Processing published by Morgan Kaufmann Publishers in 2003.[8] It was reviewed as a valuable graduate-level resource or reference work.[9] She also co-edited a festschrift dedicated to her Ph.D. advisor Judea Pearl and his influence in the field of causal modeling and probabilistic reasoning, titled Heuristics, Probability, and Causality.[5][10]

Awards and honors

Dechter received a Presidential Young Investigator Award from the United States National Science Foundation in 1991, became a fellow of the American Association of Artificial Intelligence in 1994, and received an award for research excellence from the Association of Constraint Programming in 2007.[4] In 2013, she was elected a fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery, cited "for contributions to the algorithmic foundations of automated reasoning with constraint-based and probabilistic information."[3]

References

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