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Sebastian Thrun

Sebastian Thrun (born May 14, 1967) is a German-American entrepreneur, educator, and computer scientist. He is CEO of Kitty Hawk Corporation, and chairman and co-founder of Udacity. Before that, he was a Google VP and Fellow, a Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University, and before that at Carnegie Mellon University. At Google, he founded Google X and Google's self-driving car team. He is also an adjunct professor at Stanford University and at Georgia Tech.[4]

Sebastian Thrun
Thrun in 2021
Born (1967-05-14) May 14, 1967 (age 56)
CitizenshipUnited States, Germany
Alma materUniversity of Bonn
University of Hildesheim
AwardsNational Science Foundation CAREER Award (2003)
AAAI Fellow (2006)
DARPA Grand Challenge (2005)
Scientific career
FieldsArtificial Intelligence[1]
Robotics[2]
InstitutionsGoogle X Lab (founder)
Stanford University
Carnegie Mellon University
Udacity (co-founder)
ThesisExplanation-Based Neural Network Learning: A Lifelong Learning Approach (1995)
Doctoral advisorArmin B. Cremers
Tom Mitchell[3]
Doctoral studentsFrank Dellaert[3]
John Langford[3]
Joëlle Pineau
David Stavens[3]
Websiterobots.stanford.edu
Signature

Thrun led development of the robotic vehicle Stanley[5] which won the 2005 DARPA Grand Challenge, and which has since been placed on exhibit in the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History. His team also developed a vehicle called Junior,[6] which placed second at the DARPA Urban Challenge in 2007. Thrun led the development of the Google self-driving car.[7]

Thrun is also well known for his work on probabilistic algorithms for robotics with applications including robot localization[8] and robotic mapping.[9] In recognition of his contributions, and at the age of 39, he was elected into the National Academy of Engineering and also into the Academy of Sciences Leopoldina in 2007. The Guardian recognized him as one of 20 "fighters for internet freedom".[10]

Early life and education edit

Thrun was born in 1967 in Solingen, Germany (former West Germany), the son of Winfried and Kristin (Grüner) Thrun. He completed his Vordiplom (intermediate examination) in computer science, economics, and medicine at the University of Hildesheim in 1988. At the University of Bonn, he completed a Diplom (first degree) in 1993 and a Ph.D. (summa cum laude) in 1995 in computer science and statistics.[3]Later in his career, he was awarded many honorary Ph.D. degrees from European universities, including his first alma mater.[11]

Career and research edit

In 1995 he joined the Computer Science Department at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) as a research computer scientist. In 1998 he became an assistant professor and co-director of the Robot Learning Laboratory at CMU. As a faculty member at CMU, he co-founded the Master's Program in Automated Learning and Discovery, which later would become a Ph.D. program in the broad area of machine learning and scientific discovery. In 2001 Thrun spent a sabbatical year at Stanford University. He returned to CMU to an endowed professorship, the Finmeccanica Associate Professor of Computer Science and Robotics.

Thrun left CMU in July 2003 to become an associate professor at Stanford University and was appointed as the director of SAIL in January 2004. From 2007 to 2011, Thrun was a full professor of computer science and electrical engineering at Stanford. On April 1, 2011, Thrun relinquished his tenure at Stanford to join Google as a Google Fellow. On January 23, 2012, he co-founded an online private educational organization, Udacity, which produced massive open online courses.[12] He was a Google VP and Fellow, and worked on development of the Google driverless car system, after winning DARPA Grand Challenge and finishing in second place in DARPA Urban Challenge as a professor.[13] Thrun was interviewed in the 2018 documentary on artificial intelligence Do You Trust This Computer?.[citation needed]

Robotics edit

Thrun developed a number of autonomous robotic systems that earned him international recognition. In 1994, he started the University of Bonn's Rhino project together with his doctoral thesis advisor Armin B. Cremers. In 1997 Thrun and his colleagues Wolfram Burgard and Dieter Fox developed the world's first robotic tour guide in the Deutsches Museum Bonn (1997). In 1998, the follow-up robot "Minerva" was installed in the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C., where it guided tens of thousands of visitors during a two-week deployment period. Thrun went on to found the CMU/Pitt Nursebot project, which fielded an interactive humanoid robot in a nursing home near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In 2002, Thrun helped develop mine mapping robots in a project with his colleagues William L. Whittaker and Scott Thayer, research professors at Carnegie Mellon University. After his move to Stanford University in 2003, he engaged in the development of the robot Stanley, which in 2005 won the DARPA Grand Challenge. His former graduate student Michael Montemerlo, who was co-advised by William L. Whittaker, led the software development for this robot. In 2007, Thrun's robot "Junior" won second place in the 2007 DARPA Urban Challenge.[14] Thrun joined Google as part of a sabbatical, together with several Stanford students. At Google, he co-developed Google Street View.

Thrun's best known contributions to robotics are on the theoretical end. He contributed to the area of probabilistic robotics, a field that marries statistics and robotics. He and his research group made substantial contributions in areas of mobile robot localization, such as Monte Carlo Localization,[8] simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM), and control. Probabilistic techniques have since become mainstream in robotics, and are used in numerous commercial applications. In the fall of 2005, Thrun published a textbook entitled Probabilistic Robotics together with his long-term co-workers Dieter Fox and Wolfram Burgard.[15] Since 2007, a Japanese translation of Probabilistic Robotics has been available on the Japanese market.

Thrun is one of the principal investors of the Stanford spin-off VectorMagic.[16]

Awards edit

References edit

  1. ^ Thrun, S. (2002). "Probabilistic robotics" (PDF). Communications of the ACM. 45 (3): 52–57. doi:10.1145/504729.504754. S2CID 14552983.
  2. ^ Nigam, K.; McCallum, A. K.; Thrun, S.; Mitchell, T. (2000). "Text Classification from Labeled and Unlabeled Documents using EM" (PDF). Machine Learning. 39 (2/3): 103. doi:10.1023/A:1007692713085. S2CID 686980.
  3. ^ a b c d e Sebastian Thrun at the Mathematics Genealogy Project   Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  4. ^ "Sebastian Thrun | Georgia Tech - College of Computing". Georgia Tech. Retrieved January 17, 2019.
  5. ^ Thrun, S. et al., Thrun, Sebastian; Montemerlo, Mike; Dahlkamp, Hendrik; Stavens, David; Aron, Andrei; Diebel, James; Fong, Philip; Gale, John; Halpenny, Morgan; Hoffmann, Gabriel; Lau, Kenny; Oakley, Celia; Palatucci, Mark; Pratt, Vaughan; Stang, Pascal; Strohband, Sven; Dupont, Cedric; Jendrossek, Lars-Erik; Koelen, Christian; Markey, Charles; Rummel, Carlo; Van Niekerk, Joe; Jensen, Eric; Alessandrini, Philippe; Bradski, Gary; Davies, Bob; Ettinger, Scott; Kaehler, Adrian; Nefian, Ara; Mahoney, Pamela (2007). "Stanley: The Robot That Won the DARPA Grand Challenge". The 2005 DARPA Grand Challenge. Springer Tracts in Advanced Robotics. Vol. 36. pp. 1–43. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-73429-1_1. ISBN 978-3-540-73428-4.
  6. ^ Montemerlo, M. et al., Montemerlo, Michael; Becker, Jan; Bhat, Suhrid; Dahlkamp, Hendrik; Dolgov, Dmitri; Ettinger, Scott; Haehnel, Dirk; Hilden, Tim; Hoffmann, Gabe; Huhnke, Burkhard; Johnston, Doug; Klumpp, Stefan; Langer, Dirk; Levandowski, Anthony; Levinson, Jesse; Marcil, Julien; Orenstein, David; Paefgen, Johannes; Penny, Isaac; Petrovskaya, Anna; Pflueger, Mike; Stanek, Ganymed; Stavens, David; Vogt, Antone; Thrun, Sebastian (2009). "Junior: The Stanford Entry in the Urban Challenge". The DARPA Urban Challenge. Springer Tracts in Advanced Robotics. Vol. 56. pp. 91–123. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-03991-1_3. ISBN 978-3-642-03990-4.
  7. ^ Markoff, John (October 9, 2010). "Google Cars Drive Themselves, in Traffic". The New York Times. Retrieved January 17, 2019.
  8. ^ a b c "ICRA Brochure 2020" (PDF).
  9. ^ Robotic mapping: a survey by Sebastian Thrun in Nebel, Bernhard; Lakemeyer, Gerhard (2002). Exploring Artificial Intelligence in the New Millennium (The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Artificial Intelligence). San Diego: Morgan Kaufmann. ISBN 1-55860-811-7.
  10. ^ Ball, James (April 20, 2012). "The Guardian's Open 20: fighters for internet freedom". The Guardian. Retrieved January 17, 2019.
  11. ^ "Thrun's CV" (PDF).
  12. ^ Salmon, Felix (January 23, 2012). . Reuters. Archived from the original on January 24, 2012. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  13. ^ Thrun, Sebastian "What we're driving at", The Official Google Blog, October 9, 2010. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  14. ^ "Junior: The Stanford Entry in the Urban Challenge" (PDF). Stanford University. Retrieved January 17, 2019.
  15. ^ Thrun, S.; Burgard, W.; Fox, D. (2005). Probabilistic Robotics. MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-20162-3.
  16. ^ . Vector Magic. Archived from the original on November 17, 2012. Retrieved November 11, 2012.
  17. ^ a b c "Marquis biographies online: Profile detail, Sebastian Burkhard Thrun". Marquis Who's Who. Retrieved August 6, 2012.
  18. ^ "MMOST CREATIVE PEOPLE 2011 Profile detail, Sebastian Thrun". Fast Company. Retrieved January 17, 2019.
  19. ^ . The FP Top 100 Global Thinkers. The Foreign Policy Group, LLC. Archived from the original on December 3, 2012. Retrieved December 6, 2012.
  20. ^ "Max Planck Research Award 2011". Mpg.de. March 16, 2011. Retrieved January 17, 2019.
  21. ^ "Sebastian Thrun". AAAI Ed Feigenbaum Prize. Retrieved January 17, 2019.
  22. ^ "Sebastian Thrun to Deliver Harvey Mudd Commencement Address". Harvey Mudd College. December 8, 2018. Retrieved January 17, 2019.
  23. ^ Tom Vanderbilt (December 2012). "How Artificial Intelligence Can Change Higher Education". Smithsonian.
  24. ^ "Great Immigrants: Sebastian Thrun".
  25. ^ "Fellows | European Association for Artificial Intelligence". www.eurai.org. Retrieved October 28, 2019.
  26. ^ "AAAI Classic Paper Award". AAAI. Retrieved June 26, 2023.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Sebastian Thrun at Wikimedia Commons
  • Sebastian Thrun publications indexed by Google Scholar
  • Appearances on C-SPAN

sebastian, thrun, born, 1967, german, american, entrepreneur, educator, computer, scientist, kitty, hawk, corporation, chairman, founder, udacity, before, that, google, fellow, professor, computer, science, stanford, university, before, that, carnegie, mellon,. Sebastian Thrun born May 14 1967 is a German American entrepreneur educator and computer scientist He is CEO of Kitty Hawk Corporation and chairman and co founder of Udacity Before that he was a Google VP and Fellow a Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University and before that at Carnegie Mellon University At Google he founded Google X and Google s self driving car team He is also an adjunct professor at Stanford University and at Georgia Tech 4 Sebastian ThrunThrun in 2021Born 1967 05 14 May 14 1967 age 56 Solingen West GermanyCitizenshipUnited States GermanyAlma materUniversity of BonnUniversity of HildesheimAwardsNational Science Foundation CAREER Award 2003 AAAI Fellow 2006 DARPA Grand Challenge 2005 Scientific careerFieldsArtificial Intelligence 1 Robotics 2 InstitutionsGoogle X Lab founder Stanford UniversityCarnegie Mellon UniversityUdacity co founder ThesisExplanation Based Neural Network Learning A Lifelong Learning Approach 1995 Doctoral advisorArmin B CremersTom Mitchell 3 Doctoral studentsFrank Dellaert 3 John Langford 3 Joelle PineauDavid Stavens 3 Websiterobots wbr stanford wbr eduSignature Thrun led development of the robotic vehicle Stanley 5 which won the 2005 DARPA Grand Challenge and which has since been placed on exhibit in the Smithsonian Institution s National Museum of American History His team also developed a vehicle called Junior 6 which placed second at the DARPA Urban Challenge in 2007 Thrun led the development of the Google self driving car 7 Thrun is also well known for his work on probabilistic algorithms for robotics with applications including robot localization 8 and robotic mapping 9 In recognition of his contributions and at the age of 39 he was elected into the National Academy of Engineering and also into the Academy of Sciences Leopoldina in 2007 The Guardian recognized him as one of 20 fighters for internet freedom 10 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career and research 2 1 Robotics 3 Awards 4 References 5 External linksEarly life and education editThrun was born in 1967 in Solingen Germany former West Germany the son of Winfried and Kristin Gruner Thrun He completed his Vordiplom intermediate examination in computer science economics and medicine at the University of Hildesheim in 1988 At the University of Bonn he completed a Diplom first degree in 1993 and a Ph D summa cum laude in 1995 in computer science and statistics 3 Later in his career he was awarded many honorary Ph D degrees from European universities including his first alma mater 11 Career and research editIn 1995 he joined the Computer Science Department at Carnegie Mellon University CMU as a research computer scientist In 1998 he became an assistant professor and co director of the Robot Learning Laboratory at CMU As a faculty member at CMU he co founded the Master s Program in Automated Learning and Discovery which later would become a Ph D program in the broad area of machine learning and scientific discovery In 2001 Thrun spent a sabbatical year at Stanford University He returned to CMU to an endowed professorship the Finmeccanica Associate Professor of Computer Science and Robotics Thrun left CMU in July 2003 to become an associate professor at Stanford University and was appointed as the director of SAIL in January 2004 From 2007 to 2011 Thrun was a full professor of computer science and electrical engineering at Stanford On April 1 2011 Thrun relinquished his tenure at Stanford to join Google as a Google Fellow On January 23 2012 he co founded an online private educational organization Udacity which produced massive open online courses 12 He was a Google VP and Fellow and worked on development of the Google driverless car system after winning DARPA Grand Challenge and finishing in second place in DARPA Urban Challenge as a professor 13 Thrun was interviewed in the 2018 documentary on artificial intelligence Do You Trust This Computer citation needed Robotics edit Thrun developed a number of autonomous robotic systems that earned him international recognition In 1994 he started the University of Bonn s Rhino project together with his doctoral thesis advisor Armin B Cremers In 1997 Thrun and his colleagues Wolfram Burgard and Dieter Fox developed the world s first robotic tour guide in the Deutsches Museum Bonn 1997 In 1998 the follow up robot Minerva was installed in the Smithsonian s National Museum of American History in Washington D C where it guided tens of thousands of visitors during a two week deployment period Thrun went on to found the CMU Pitt Nursebot project which fielded an interactive humanoid robot in a nursing home near Pittsburgh Pennsylvania In 2002 Thrun helped develop mine mapping robots in a project with his colleagues William L Whittaker and Scott Thayer research professors at Carnegie Mellon University After his move to Stanford University in 2003 he engaged in the development of the robot Stanley which in 2005 won the DARPA Grand Challenge His former graduate student Michael Montemerlo who was co advised by William L Whittaker led the software development for this robot In 2007 Thrun s robot Junior won second place in the 2007 DARPA Urban Challenge 14 Thrun joined Google as part of a sabbatical together with several Stanford students At Google he co developed Google Street View Thrun s best known contributions to robotics are on the theoretical end He contributed to the area of probabilistic robotics a field that marries statistics and robotics He and his research group made substantial contributions in areas of mobile robot localization such as Monte Carlo Localization 8 simultaneous localization and mapping SLAM and control Probabilistic techniques have since become mainstream in robotics and are used in numerous commercial applications In the fall of 2005 Thrun published a textbook entitled Probabilistic Robotics together with his long term co workers Dieter Fox and Wolfram Burgard 15 Since 2007 a Japanese translation of Probabilistic Robotics has been available on the Japanese market Thrun is one of the principal investors of the Stanford spin off VectorMagic 16 Awards edit nbsp Biography portal Named one of Brilliant 5 by Popular Science in 2005 17 CAREER award from the National Science Foundation 1999 2003 17 Olympus award German Society for Pattern Recognition 2001 17 Fast Company Fifth most creative person in 2011 18 4 on Foreign Policy magazine s Top 100 Global Thinkers of 2012 19 Max Planck Research Award 2011 20 Inaugural AAAI Ed Feigenbaum Prize Selected as the fifth most creative person in the business world by the Fast Company in 2011 21 22 Thrun was the 2012 recipient of Smithsonian magazine s American Ingenuity Award in the Education category 23 Thrun was named by Carnegie Corporation of New York in 2013 as an honoree of the Great Immigrants Award 24 Fellow of the European Association for Artificial Intelligence EurAI 25 A recipient of Classic paper award at AAAI 2017 26 and Milestone award at ICRA 2020 8 for his papers on Monte Carlo Localization for Mobile Robots References edit Thrun S 2002 Probabilistic robotics PDF Communications of the ACM 45 3 52 57 doi 10 1145 504729 504754 S2CID 14552983 Nigam K McCallum A K Thrun S Mitchell T 2000 Text Classification from Labeled and Unlabeled Documents using EM PDF Machine Learning 39 2 3 103 doi 10 1023 A 1007692713085 S2CID 686980 a b c d e Sebastian Thrun at the Mathematics Genealogy Project nbsp Retrieved December 12 2015 Sebastian Thrun Georgia Tech College of Computing Georgia Tech Retrieved January 17 2019 Thrun S et al Thrun Sebastian Montemerlo Mike Dahlkamp Hendrik Stavens David Aron Andrei Diebel James Fong Philip Gale John Halpenny Morgan Hoffmann Gabriel Lau Kenny Oakley Celia Palatucci Mark Pratt Vaughan Stang Pascal Strohband Sven Dupont Cedric Jendrossek Lars Erik Koelen Christian Markey Charles Rummel Carlo Van Niekerk Joe Jensen Eric Alessandrini Philippe Bradski Gary Davies Bob Ettinger Scott Kaehler Adrian Nefian Ara Mahoney Pamela 2007 Stanley The Robot That Won the DARPA Grand Challenge The 2005 DARPA Grand Challenge Springer Tracts in Advanced Robotics Vol 36 pp 1 43 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 73429 1 1 ISBN 978 3 540 73428 4 Montemerlo M et al Montemerlo Michael Becker Jan Bhat Suhrid Dahlkamp Hendrik Dolgov Dmitri Ettinger Scott Haehnel Dirk Hilden Tim Hoffmann Gabe Huhnke Burkhard Johnston Doug Klumpp Stefan Langer Dirk Levandowski Anthony Levinson Jesse Marcil Julien Orenstein David Paefgen Johannes Penny Isaac Petrovskaya Anna Pflueger Mike Stanek Ganymed Stavens David Vogt Antone Thrun Sebastian 2009 Junior The Stanford Entry in the Urban Challenge The DARPA Urban Challenge Springer Tracts in Advanced Robotics Vol 56 pp 91 123 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 03991 1 3 ISBN 978 3 642 03990 4 Markoff John October 9 2010 Google Cars Drive Themselves in Traffic The New York Times Retrieved January 17 2019 a b c ICRA Brochure 2020 PDF Robotic mapping a survey by Sebastian Thrun in Nebel Bernhard Lakemeyer Gerhard 2002 Exploring Artificial Intelligence in the New Millennium The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Artificial Intelligence San Diego Morgan Kaufmann ISBN 1 55860 811 7 Ball James April 20 2012 The Guardian s Open 20 fighters for internet freedom The Guardian Retrieved January 17 2019 Thrun s CV PDF Salmon Felix January 23 2012 Udacity and the Future of Online Universities Reuters Archived from the original on January 24 2012 Retrieved January 17 2017 Thrun Sebastian What we re driving at The Official Google Blog October 9 2010 Retrieved January 17 2017 Junior The Stanford Entry in the Urban Challenge PDF Stanford University Retrieved January 17 2019 Thrun S Burgard W Fox D 2005 Probabilistic Robotics MIT Press ISBN 0 262 20162 3 About Vector Magic Archived from the original on November 17 2012 Retrieved November 11 2012 a b c Marquis biographies online Profile detail Sebastian Burkhard Thrun Marquis Who s Who Retrieved August 6 2012 MMOST CREATIVE PEOPLE 2011 Profile detail Sebastian Thrun Fast Company Retrieved January 17 2019 4 Sebastian Thrun The FP Top 100 Global Thinkers The Foreign Policy Group LLC Archived from the original on December 3 2012 Retrieved December 6 2012 Max Planck Research Award 2011 Mpg de March 16 2011 Retrieved January 17 2019 Sebastian Thrun AAAI Ed Feigenbaum Prize Retrieved January 17 2019 Sebastian Thrun to Deliver Harvey Mudd Commencement Address Harvey Mudd College December 8 2018 Retrieved January 17 2019 Tom Vanderbilt December 2012 How Artificial Intelligence Can Change Higher Education Smithsonian Great Immigrants Sebastian Thrun Fellows European Association for Artificial Intelligence www eurai org Retrieved October 28 2019 AAAI Classic Paper Award AAAI Retrieved June 26 2023 External links edit nbsp Media related to Sebastian Thrun at Wikimedia Commons Sebastian Thrun publications indexed by Google Scholar Appearances on C SPAN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sebastian Thrun amp oldid 1208186312, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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