Happy Birthday KSL
Artificial
intelligence (AI) is a versatile branch of computer science. Although many
people associate the field with robots, it also covers applications including “expert
systems,” or software programs that, through simulated reasoning and
human-supplied expertise, can analyze specialized problems and make suggestions
about solutions.
This year marks the 25th anniversary of the founding of the Knowledge
Systems Laboratory, a lab that grew out of knowledge-based systems
research by pioneering AI researchers Ed Feigenbaum, Kumagai Professor
Emeritus of Computer Science, and Bruce Buchanan, now University Professor
Emeritus at the University of Pittsburgh.
The pair collaborated with chemist Carl Djerassi (father of the birth
control pill) and Nobel-prize winning biologist Joshua Lederberg to
create the first expert system, DENDRAL, in 1965. The system analyzed
the mass spectrum of an organic compound trying to determine its structure.
As the work became ever more interdisciplinary, it was renamed the
Heuristic Programming Project. It was renamed again in 1982 when researchers
Feigenbaum (pictured on the left) and Buchanan (middle), Edward
Shortliffe (right), Thomas Rindfleisch (not pictured), and others joined their projects together
into the KSL.
CS Professor Emeritus Richard Fikes became the lab’s director in
1999 and last year Senior Research Scientist Deborah McGuiness became
the acting director. Current projects at the lab include developing intelligent
software assistants for human analysts and contributing enabling technology
for the Semantic Web, a concept of the Web in which computers can discover
and organize information based on its meaning.
We are interested in your nostalgic photos and the stories they tell.
If you’d like to share them with the Stanford Engineering community, e-mail them to
David Orenstein, Manager, Communications and P.R.