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In the year 2031, or 2040 and beyond, there are outstanding questions to consider to explore significant advances in learning and reasoning.
Join host X, and co-host AFOSR program officer for the Science of Information, Computation, Learning, and Fusion, Doug Riecken, on October 12, 2022 from 2-4pm EDT for a lively discussion with A.I. leaders: X as they debate the next big question in the science of artificial intelligence.
This is an ongoing series of 2-hour sessions with thought leaders on the subject.
Agenda
INTRO SECTION
2:00-2:10 EDT
Welcome from AFOSRXDr. Doug Riecken, AFOSR
THINKER/SPEAKER SECTION
2:10-3:25 EDT
Remarks and Panel Discussion
Each speaker will present in ~7-8 min their question(s) and a couple of comments to communicate the key ideas – then at least two or more of the other four speakers will comment on the question(s) for ~7-8 min in order to explore more details. Speaking order:
X
OPEN DISCUSSION BY SPEAKERS WITH ALL ATTENDING
3:25-4:00 EDT
Interactive Discussion
We invite all attendees to pose questions/topics for the panel speakers
Panel Bios
Speaker, Organization
Question:
Link to bio:
Doug Riecken, AFOSR program officer for the Science of Information, Computation, Learning, and Fusion
Riecken is a trained concert pianist with a B.A. from the Manhattan School of Music and studies at the Juilliard School of Music. He spent many years performing classical, jazz, and rock styles on international concert tours with world-renowned artists before he switched to a career in cognitive and computing science. He received his PhD from Rutgers University under thesis advisor Dr. Marvin Minsky from MIT; a founding father of artificial intelligence. Riecken and Minsky spent 30+ years in friendship researching learning and the mind. Riecken is a thought leader in the areas of big data analytics and machine learning, human-computer interaction and design, knowledge discovery and data mining, global cloud enterprise architectures, and privacy management. He joined the Air Force Office of Scientific Research as a program officer in 2014 and is a senior member of the AFRL ACT3 team. Full Bio