Tomas Lozano-Pérez
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Tomas Lozano-Pérez
Summary
Tomas Lozano-Pérez is a human[1]. He worked as a computer scientist[2] and university teacher[3]. He ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5 views/month, #7,298 of 1,000,298).[4]
Key Facts
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez worked as a computer scientist[2].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez's professions included university teacher[3].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez was employed by Massachusetts Institute of Technology[5].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez's doctoral advisor was Berthold K. P. Horn[6].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez received the AAAI Fellow[7].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez received the ACM Fellow[8].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez was a member of Association for Computing Machinery[9].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez is recorded as male[10].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez's instance of is recorded as human[11].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez supervised Michael Andreas Erdmann as a doctoral student[12].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez supervised Paul Viola as a doctoral student[13].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez supervised John Canny as a doctoral student[14].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez supervised Daniel S. Weld as a doctoral student[15].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez supervised Matthew T. Mason as a doctoral student[16].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez supervised Bruce Donald as a doctoral student[17].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez supervised Lisa Tucker-Kellogg as a doctoral student[18].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez supervised Cheuk-san Edward Wang as a doctoral student[19].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez supervised Margaret Aycinena Lippow as a doctoral student[20].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez supervised Kaijen Hsiao as a doctoral student[21].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez supervised Selim Temizer as a doctoral student[22].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez supervised Kirsten Barbara Moore as a doctoral student[23].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez supervised Jared Glover as a doctoral student[24].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez supervised George Tao-Shun Chou as a doctoral student[25].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez supervised Lawson L.S. Wong as a doctoral student[26].
- Tomas Lozano-Pérez's ORCID iD is recorded as 0000-0002-8657-2450[27].
Body
Education
Tomas Lozano-Pérez's doctoral advisor was Berthold K. P. Horn[6].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include computer scientist[2] and university teacher[3]. Among Tomas Lozano-Pérez's employers was Massachusetts Institute of Technology[5]. Doctoral students include Michael Andreas Erdmann[12]; Paul Viola[13], a university teacher[28], b. 1966[29], of United States[30], awarded the Marr Prize[31], specialised in computer science[32]; John Canny[14], a computer scientist[33], b. 1953[34], of Australia[35], awarded the Machtey Award[36], specialised in computer scientist[37]; Daniel S. Weld[15], a computer scientist[38], b. 1960[39], of United States[40], awarded the AAAI Fellow[41]; Matthew T. Mason[16], a roboticist[42], b. 1952[43], of United States[44], awarded the AAAI Fellow[45], specialised in robotics[46]; and Bruce Donald[17], a computer scientist[47], b. 1958[48], of United States[49], awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship[50].
Recognition
Awards received include AAAI Fellow[7], a science award[51], in United States[52] and ACM Fellow[8], a fellowship award[53].
Why It Matters
Tomas Lozano-Pérez ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5 views/month, #7,298 of 1,000,298).[4]
His notable doctoral advisees include John Canny[54], a computer scientist[55], b. 1953[56], of Australia[57], awarded the Machtey Award[58], specialised in computer scientist[59]; Daniel S. Weld[60], a computer scientist[61], b. 1960[62], of United States[63], awarded the AAAI Fellow[64]; Paul Viola[65], a university teacher[66], b. 1966[67], of United States[68], awarded the Marr Prize[69], specialised in computer science[70]; Bruce Donald[71], a computer scientist[72], b. 1958[73], of United States[74], awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship[75]; Matthew T. Mason[76], a roboticist[77], b. 1952[78], of United States[79], awarded the AAAI Fellow[80], specialised in robotics[81]; and Margaret Aycinena Lippow[82], a computer scientist[83].
FAQs
What did Tomas Lozano-Pérez do for work?
Tomas Lozano-Pérez worked as computer scientist[2] and university teacher[3].