Marcus Hutter
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Marcus Hutter | |
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BrainLAB | |
Thesis | Instantons in QCD (1996) |
Doctoral advisor | Harald Fritzsch |
Other academic advisors | Wilfried Brauer |
Doctoral students | Shane Legg and Jan Leike and Tor Lattimore |
Website | www |
Marcus Hutter (born April 14, 1967 in Munich) is a professor and artificial intelligence researcher. As a Senior Scientist at
Istituto Dalle Molle di Studi sull'Intelligenza Artificiale (Dalle Molle Institute for Artificial Intelligence Research) in Manno, Switzerland.[citation needed] He developed a mathematical theory of artificial general intelligence. His book Universal Artificial Intelligence: Sequential Decisions Based on Algorithmic Probability was published by Springer in 2005.[3]
Research
Starting in 2000, Hutter developed and published a mathematical theory of
In 2005, Hutter and Legg published an intelligence test for artificial intelligence devices.[7]
In 2009, Hutter developed and published the theory of feature reinforcement learning.[8]
In 2014, Lattimore and Hutter published an asymptotically optimal extension of the AIXI agent.[9]
Hutter Prize
In 2006, Hutter announced the Hutter Prize for Lossless Compression of Human Knowledge, with a total of €50,000 in prize money.[10] In 2020, Hutter raised the prize money for the Hutter Prize to €500,000.[11][6]
See also
- Solomonoff induction
Published works
- Marcus Hutter (2002). "The Fastest and Shortest Algorithm for All Well-Defined Problems". International Journal of Foundations of Computer Science. 13 (3). World Scientific: 431–443. S2CID 5496821.
- Marcus Hutter (2005). Universal Artificial Intelligence: Sequential Decisions Based on Algorithmic Probability. Springer. ISBN 9783540221395.
- Joel Veness, Kee Siong Ng, Marcus Hutter, William Uther and David Silver (2011). "A Monte-Carlo AIXI Approximation". Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research. 40. AAAI Press: 95–142. S2CID 206618.)
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
References
- ^ [1]. DeepMind. Accessed February 2019.
- ^ [2]. The Australian National University, Canberra. Accessed December 2016.
- ISBN 9783540221395.
- S2CID 5496821.
- ISBN 9781586038335. Pages 399–403
- ^ a b Marcus Hutter. "500'000€ Prize for Compressing Human Knowledge". hutter1.net. Retrieved 25 February 2020.
- ^ Duncan Graham-Rowe (12 August 2005). IQ test for AI devices gets experts thinking. New Scientist.
- ISSN 1946-0163.
- ISBN 978-3-319-11661-7.
- ^ Marcus Hutter. "50'000€ Prize for Compressing Human Knowledge". hutter1.net. Retrieved 29 November 2016.
- ^ Sagar, Ram (7 April 2020). "Compress Data And Win Hutter Prize Worth Half A Million Euros". Analytics India Magazine. Retrieved 7 March 2024.