Arthur B. Guise Medal
The Arthur B. Guise Medal is awarded annually by the Society of Fire Protection Engineers and recognizes eminent achievement in the advancement of the science and technology of fire protection engineering and is named in memory of the achievements of Arthur Guise.[1]
Guise Medal Recipients
Source: SFPE
- 1983 Arthur B Guise
- 1985 Gunnar Heskestad
- 1986 Howard Emmons
- 1987 Oliver W. Johnson
- 1989 Tibor Z. Harmathy
- 1990 Walter M. Haessler
- 1990 Edwin J. "Jake" Jablonski
- 1991 Phillip H. Thomas
- 1992 George T. Tamura
- 1993 James F. O'Regan
- 1994 Margret Law
- 1995 Dougal Drysdale
- 1997 Cheng Yao
- 1998 John L. Bryan
- 1999 Howard R. Baum
- 2000 Craig L. Beyler
- 2001 R. Brady Williamson
- 2002 David A. Lucht
- 2003 Hsiang-Cheng Kung
- 2004 Vytenis Babrauskas
- 2005 Phillip J. DiNenno
- 2006 James G. Quintiere
- 2007 William D. Walton
- 2008 Jose L. Torero
- 2009 Archibald Tewarson
- 2010 Guyléne Proulx
- 2011 Charles Fleischmann
- 2012 Richard W. Bukowski
- 2013 David A. Charters
- 2014 Ai Sekizawa
- 2015 Takeyoshi Tanaka
- 2016 James A. Milke
- 2017 Arvind Atreya
- 2018 Guillermo Rein
- 2019 Paul E. Rivers
gollark: No, lambda calculus is a relatively simple model you can understand fairly easily.
gollark: And with neural networks, you don't actually know *how* the network does its job, just that you feed in pixels and somehow get classification data out.
gollark: There is still not, as far as I know, an approach to detect what an object is other than just training neural networks on the task.
gollark: It's simple to say, for example, "the program should detect if something is a bird", but incredibly hard to actually explain how to detect birds.
gollark: Yes. A lot of the time something can be simple to *vaguely describe* but really hard to describe precisely enough for you to actually program it.
See also
References
- "Arthur B. Guise". Society of Fire Protection Engineers. Archived from the original on 19 February 2015. Retrieved 19 February 2015.
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