Michael Uschold

(Redirected from Mike Uschold)

Michael F. Uschold (born 1955) is an American computer scientist, Artificial Intelligence researcher, and consultant known for his work on knowledge representation and ontology.[1][2]

Michael F. Uschold
Michael Uschold, 2016
Born1955
Alma materCanisius College, Rutgers University, University of Edinburgh
Occupation(s)Computer scientist, artificial intelligence researcher, consultant
Employer(s)University of Edinburgh, Boeing Phantom Works
Known forKnowledge representation, ontology

Biography

edit

Uschold received his BA in Mathematics and Physics in 1977 from Canisius College, his MS in Computer Science in 1981 from Rutgers University, and his Ph.D. in Artificial Intelligence in 1991 from the University of Edinburgh.[3]

In 1983, Uschold joined the faculty of the University of Edinburgh, Department of Artificial Intelligence, as a researcher and lecturer, and later moved to its Artificial Intelligence Applications Institute. In 1997, he left the academic world and became a research scientist at Boeing Phantom Works, a division of The Boeing Company, specializing in advanced prototyping. In 2007, he became a senior ontologist at a computer science consulting firm; in 2009, he started as an independent consultant; and since 2010, he has participated in a management consulting firm.[3]

Uschold's research interests and expertise are in the fields of "software concept design and architecture; facilitation, analysis, and modeling; asking probing questions; getting to the heart of the matter; and communication of complex information in simple terms. Writing, speaking, and presenting; constructive reviewing and critiquing; and semantic technology."[3]

Selected publications

edit

Papers and articles, a selection:

References

edit
  1. ^ Guarino, Nicola, ed. Formal Ontology in Information Systems: Proceedings of the First International Conference (FIOS'98), June 6–8, Trento, Italy. Vol. 46. IOS press, 1998.
  2. ^ Noy, Natalya F., and Deborah L. McGuinness. Ontology development 101: A guide to creating your first ontology. (2001).
  3. ^ a b c Michael F. Uschold at semanticarts.com, 2017. Accessed 18-05-2017
edit