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Stuart Geman

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Nationality
  
American

Institution
  
Fields
  

Name
  
Stuart Geman

Institutions
  
Doctoral advisor
  
Stuart Geman wwwdambrownedupeoplegemanHomepageImagesgem

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Stuart Alan Geman (born c. 1949) is an American mathematician, known for influential contributions to computer vision, statistics, probability theory, machine learning, and the neurosciences. He and his brother, Donald Geman, are well known for proposing the Gibbs sampler, and for the first proof of convergence of the simulated annealing algorithm .

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Biography

Geman was born and raised in Chicago. He was educated at the University of Michigan (B.S., Physics, 1971), Dartmouth Medical College (MS, Neurophysiology, 1973), and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Ph.D, Applied Mathematics, 1977).

Since 1977, he has been a member of the faculty at Brown University, where he has worked in the Pattern Theory group, and is currently the James Manning Professor of Applied Mathematics. He has received many honors and awards, including selection as a Presidential Young Investigator and as an ISI Highly Cited researcher. He is an elected member of the International Statistical Institute, and a fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics and of the American Mathematical Society. He was elected to the US National Academy of Sciences in 2011.

Work

Geman’s scientific contributions span work in probabilistic and statistical approaches to artificial intelligence, Markov random fields, Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) methods, nonparametric inference, random matrices, random dynamical systems, neural networks, neurophysiology, financial markets, and natural image statistics. Particularly notable works include: the development of the Gibbs sampler, proof of convergence of simulated annealing, foundational contributions to the Markov random field (“graphical model”) approach to inference in vision and machine learning, and work on the compositional foundations of vision and cognition.

Influences

Steve Jobs, Apple co-founder and CEO, attributed his uniform style dressing to Stuart Geman. Jobs told his biographer Walter Isaacson "...he came to like the idea of having a uniform for himself, both because of its daily convenience (the rationale he claimed) and its ability to convey a signature style."

References

Stuart Geman Wikipedia