Oliver Selfridge
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ( mathematician, computer scientist) | |
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Born | 10 May 1926 |
Died | 3 December 2008 (Age 82) |
Alma mater | MIT |
Interests | ![]() |
Oliver Selfridge was a founder of the field of artificial intelligence and a member of NSA’s Scientific Advisory Board until 1993.[1] |
Oliver Gordon Selfridge was a mathematician and computer scientist who pioneered the early foundations of modern artificial intelligence.
He is mostly known for his 1959 paper, "Pandemonium: A paradigm for learning" describing what's now known as the Pandemonium Architecture.
He has been called the "Father of Machine Perception."[2]
Biography
Selfridge, born in England, was a grandson of Harry Gordon Selfridge, the founder of Selfridges department stores. His father was Harry Gordon Selfridge Jr. and his mother was a clerk at Selfridge's store. His parents had met, fallen in love, married and had children all in secret, and Oliver never met his grandfather, Harry Sr. He was educated at Malvern College, and, upon moving to the US, at Middlesex School in Concord, Massachusetts, before earning an BSc from MIT in mathematics in 1945. He then became a graduate student of Norbert Wiener at MIT, but did not write up his doctoral research and never earned a PhD.
Marvin Minsky considered Selfridge to be one of his mentors, and Selfridge was one of the 11 attendees, with Minsky, of the Dartmouth workshop that is considered the founding event of artificial intelligence as a field.
Selfridge wrote important early papers on neural networks, pattern recognition, and machine learning, and his "Pandemonium" paper (1959) is generally recognied as a classic in artificial intelligence. In it, Selfridge introduced the notion of "demons" that record events as they occur, recognise patterns in those events, and may trigger subsequent events according to patterns they recognise. Over time, this idea gave rise to aspect-oriented programming.
In 1968, in their formative paper "The Computer as a Communication Device", J C R Licklider and Robert Taylor introduced a concept known as an OLIVER (On-Line Interactive Vicarious Expediter and Responder), which was named in honour of Selfridge.
Selfridge spent his career at Lincoln Laboratory, MIT (where he was Associate Director of Project MAC), Bolt, Beranek and Newman, and GTE Laboratories where he became Chief Scientist. He served on the NSA Advisory Board for 20 years, chairing the Data Processing Panel. In 1991 he was elected a Fellow of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence. Selfridge retired in 1993.
NSA "best source"
In 2015, Duncan Campbell identified Selfridge as his "best source" for Campbell's 1980 reporting on US National Security Agency wiretapping activity at RAF Menwith Hill in England. Campbell described this operation in the New Statesman as a "billion dollar phone tap".
Private life
Selfridge also authored four children's books: "Sticks", "Fingers Come In Fives", "All About Mud", and "Trouble With Dragons".
Selfridge was married and divorced twice and is survived by two daughters and two sons.[3]