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  1. Judea Pearl es un matemático, científico de la computación y filósofo, más conocido por desarrollar la aproximación probabilística a la inteligencia artificial, en particular utilizando las redes bayesianas, y la formalización del razonamiento causal (véase Causalidad ).

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Judea_PearlJudea Pearl - Wikipedia

    Judea Pearl (born September 4, 1936) is an Israeli-American computer scientist and philosopher, best known for championing the probabilistic approach to artificial intelligence and the development of Bayesian networks (see the article on belief propagation ).

    • Leonard Strauss, Leonard Bergstein
  3. J. Pearl,"Robustness of Causal Claims" In Proceedings of the 20th Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, AUAI Press: Arlington, VA, 446-453, July 2004. (R-290): [pdf] J. Tian and J. Pearl, "A General Identification Condition for Causal Effects" In Proceedings of the Eighteenth Conference on Artificial Intelligence , AAAI/The MIT Press: Menlo Park, 567-573, August 2002.

  4. Judea Pearl. Professor of Computer Science, University of California, Los Angeles. Verified email at cs.ucla.edu - Homepage. causality artificial intelligence structural equations counterfactuals. Title. Sort. Sort by citations Sort by year Sort by title. Cited by.

  5. 23 de feb. de 2022 · Judea Pearl (Israel, 1936), el nuevo beneficiario del premio Fronteras del Conocimiento 2022 en Tecnologías de la Información y la Comunicación de la Fundación BBVA, es uno de los creadores de...

  6. JUDEA PEARL - BIO. Judea Pearl is Chancellor's professor of computer science and statistics at UCLA, and a distinguished visiting professor at the Technion, Israel Institute of Technology. He joined the faculty of UCLA in 1970, where he currently directs the Cognitive Systems Laboratory and conducts research in artificial intelligence, human ...

  7. Judea Pearl (born 1936, Tel Aviv, Palestine [now Tel Aviv–Yafo, Israel]) Israeli-American computer scientist and winner of the 2011 A.M. Turing Award, the highest honour in computer science, for his “fundamental contributions to artificial intelligence.”