Judy Goldsmith (computer scientist)

Judith Anne (Judy) Goldsmith is a computer scientist whose publications span a wide range of topics including artificial intelligence, computational complexity theory, decision theory, and computer science education. She is a professor of computer science at the University of Kentucky.

Education and career

Goldsmith graduated from Princeton University in 1982, with a bachelor's degree in mathematics.[1] She completed her Ph.D. at the University of Wisconsin–Madison in mathematics (with a minor in computer science) in 1988. Her dissertation, Polynomial Isomorphisms and Near-Testable Sets, was supervised by Deborah Joseph.[2]

After short-term positions as a lecturer at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, research instructor at Dartmouth College, and NSF visiting professor at Boston University, she joined the computer science faculty at the University of Manitoba in 1991. She moved to the University of Kentucky in 1993.[1]

Public opinion

In computer science education, Goldsmith has spoken in favor of using science fiction in preference to case studies for teaching the ethics of artificial intelligence.[3] She is Jewish, and participates in the Lexington, Kentucky Havurah.[4]

Recognition

Goldsmith won the Mentor Award of the American Association for the Advancement of Sciences in 1997.[5]

Selected publications

  • Buss, Jonathan F.; Goldsmith, Judy (1993), "Nondeterminism within ", SIAM Journal on Computing, 22 (3): 560–572, doi:10.1137/0222038, MR 1219041
  • Littman, Michael L.; Goldsmith, Judy; Mundhenk, Martin (1998), "The computational complexity of probabilistic planning", Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research, 9: 1–36, arXiv:cs/9808101, MR 1654163
  • Mundhenk, Martin; Goldsmith, Judy; Lusena, Christopher; Allender, Eric (2000), "Complexity of finite-horizon Markov decision process problems", Journal of the ACM, 47 (4): 681–720, doi:10.1145/347476.347480, MR 1866174
  • Goldsmith, Judy; Lang, Jérôme; Truszczyński, Miroslaw; Wilson, Nic (2008), "The computational complexity of dominance and consistency in CP-nets", Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research, 33: 403–432, MR 2487345
gollark: Well, no, it was designed for testing short bits of code.
gollark: Multiscript?
gollark: ++exec ```luaprint("hello this is lua now")if true then print "bees." end```
gollark: Observe.
gollark: Well, mine supports essentially all languages ever, but only python with discord access.

References

  1. Curriculum vitae (PDF), retrieved 2018-12-09
  2. Judy Goldsmith at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. Quach, Katyanna (February 7, 2017), "Teach undergrads ethics to ensure future AI is safe – compsci boffins", The Register
  4. Rosh Hashanah 2015: A Sermon by Judy Goldsmith, Lexington Havurah, September 30, 2015
  5. AAAS Mentor Awards, American Association for the Advancement of Sciences, retrieved 2018-12-09
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