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Parunak, H.
AxonAI, Inc.
Harrisonburg, Virginia
 
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H. Van Dyke Parunak is Vice President for Technology Innovation at AxonAI, Inc. He has extensive experience in both academic and industrial environments with chaos and complex systems, artificial intelligence, distributed computing, and human interfaces. Since 1984, he led the Agent-based and Complex Systems Research group, housed since 1984 in a variety of companies, studying swarm intelligence, emergent behavior, and nonlinear dynamics. In 2013, AxonAI was formed to commercialize these results.

His major research accomplishments include fine-grained agent architectures for a variety of manufacturing and defense functions, emphasizing applications of nonlinear dynamics and chaos theory to analyzing and controlling agent communities. He and his colleagues develop applications that take advantage of the self-organizing potential of very simple agents when they interact through a shared environment, inspired by examples in biological and ecological systems. He is the author or co-author of more than 200 technical articles and reports, and the coinventor on 13 patents in the area of agent technology.

Parunak has worked as a project designer and associate investigator at Harvard University, as an Assistant Professor and Postdoctoral Scholar at the University of Michigan, and as a computer scientist with Comshare, Inc. His research was done at the Industrial Technology Institute, ERIM, Altarum, NewVectors, TechTeam Government Solutions, Jacobs Technology Group, and Soar Technology. He received an AB in Physics from Princeton University (1969), an MS in Computer and Communication Sciences from the University of Michigan (1982), and a PhD in Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations from Harvard University (1978). He is a member of the American Association for Artificial Intelligence and the Association for Computing Machinery.

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Updated March 1, 2016

 
 
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- 10 of 26 reviews

   
   Stochastic computing: techniques and applications
Gross W., Gaudet V., Springer International Publishing, New York, NY, 2019. 215 pp.  Type: Book (978-3-030037-29-1)

Stochastic computing is an approach to numerical computing that dates back to von Neumann’s work on probabilistic logics in 1952, and that requires far fewer transistors than conventional numerical processing. This economy le...

Oct 4 2019  
   Calendrical calculations: the ultimate edition (4th ed.)
Reingold E., Dershowitz N., Cambridge University Press, New York, NY, 2018. 662 pp.  Type: Book (978-1-107683-16-7)

Calendrical computation is motivated by a collision between incommensurability and importance. The month (the time from one new moon to another) is not an integral number of days, and the year (the time between successive spring equino...

Jul 30 2019  
   The diversity bonus: how great teams pay off in the knowledge economy
Page S., PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS, Princeton, NJ, 2017. 328 pp.  Type: Book (978-0-691176-88-8)

Diversity, perhaps appropriately, means different things to different people. To some it is a quasi-religious norm and a central motivation in political discussions and policy debates. To others, such as cognitive scientists and expert...

Oct 15 2018  
   Codes, cryptology and curves with computer algebra
Pellikaan R., Wu X., Bulygin S., Jurrius R., Cambridge University Press, New York, NY, 2018. 606 pp.  Type: Book (978-0-521520-36-2)

This volume offers a terse, highly formal exposition of the relation between the four subjects named in the title: codes (transformations of a stream of information), cryptology (transformations that seek to hide the original content),...

Sep 13 2018  
   The inevitable: understanding the 12 technological forces that will shape our future
Kelly K., Viking Press, New York, NY, 2016. 336 pp.  Type: Book (978-0-525428-08-4), Reviews: (1 of 2)

Kevin Kelly’s entire career has been focused on making sense of the future. From his intense personal pilgrimage as a young man, through his work at the Whole Earth Catalog and Review and his leadership of Wi...

Aug 31 2016  
   Control: digitality as cultural logic
Franklin S., The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2015. 240 pp.  Type: Book (978-0-262029-53-7)

The advent and growth of digital technology has radically changed our society, and the title of this volume leads the reader to anticipate a reasoned, documented account of this important cultural influence. Instead, the volume is a tr...

Feb 10 2016  
   Turing machine universality of the game of life
Rendell P., Springer Publishing Company, Incorporated, New York, NY, 2015. 177 pp.  Type: Book (978-3-319198-41-5)

Since it was invented by John Conway and popularized in Martin Gardner’s “Mathematical Games” column in Scientific American in 1970 [1], the Game of Life (GoL) has held a special fascination for fan...

Nov 30 2015  
   Cognitive computing and big data analytics
Hurwitz J., Kaufman M., Bowles A., Wiley Publishing, Hoboken, NJ, 2015. 288 pp.  Type: Book (978-1-118896-62-4)

The claim that a system is “cognitive” can mean one of two very different things. For a half-century, the artificial intelligence (AI) research community has used the term to refer to approaches that mimic human mec...

Oct 5 2015  
   An introduction to agent-based modeling: modeling natural, social, and engineered complex systems with NetLogo
Wilensky U., Rand W., The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2015. 504 pp.  Type: Book (978-0-262731-89-8), Reviews: (1 of 2)

The NetLogo environment developed at Northwestern University [1] has become one of the most widely used tools for agent-based modeling. NetLogo’s restricted dialect of LISP has proven much more accessible to users such as soc...

Jun 17 2015  
   Willful ignorance: the mismeasure of uncertainty
Weisberg H., Wiley Publishing, Hoboken, NJ, 2014. 452 pp.  Type: Book (978-0-470890-44-8)

No empirical assertion is absolutely certain, and scientific progress has always required assessing the degree of uncertainty associated with a claimed result. To most researchers trained in the last 50 years, this assessment takes the...

Mar 24 2015  
 
 
 
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