Catherine Havasi Explained

Catherine Havasi
Birth Place:Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Nationality:American
Alma Mater:Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) (S.B., 2003)
(M.Eng, 2004)
Brandeis University (Ph.D, 2009)
Thesis Title:Discovering Semantic Relations Using Singular Value Decomposition
Thesis Year:2009
Doctoral Advisor:James Pustejovsky
Field:Artificial intelligence

Catherine Havasi (born 1981) is an American scientist who specializes in artificial intelligence (AI) at MIT Media Lab.[1] She co-founded[2] and was CEO of AI company, Luminoso for 8 years.[3] Havasi was a member of the MIT group engaged in the Open Mind Common Sense (also known as OMCS) AI project that created the natural language AI program ConceptNet.[4] [5] Havasi is currently the Chief of Innovation and Technology Strategy at Babel Street, the world's leading AI-enabled data-to-knowledge platform.[6]

Early life and education

Havasi grew up in Pittsburgh and became interested in artificial intelligence from reading Marvin Minsky's 1986 book The Society of Mind.[7] She attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where she became involved in the MIT Media Lab and studied under Minsky. Havasi is an alumnus of the Science Talent Search 1999 as well as the International Science and Engineering Fair 1996, 1998, and 1999. She received a S.B. and M.Eng from MIT and a PhD in computer science from Brandeis University.[8]

Career

In the 1990s, Catherine Havasi invented crowd sourcing for artificial intelligence.[9] In 1999, she became involved in the MIT project Open Mind Common Sense with Minsky and Push Singh,[4] and was part of a team that created ConceptNet, an open-source semantic network based on the information in the OMCS database.

In 2010, Havasi was among the team that founded Luminoso, a text analytics software company building on the work of ConceptNet.[10]

Havasi was named among Boston Business Journals "40 Under 40", of business and civic leaders making a major impact in their respective fields in 2014. Fast Company included her in its "100 Most Creative People in Business 2015" listing.

In 2019, the U.S Embassy invited Dr. Catherine to Portugal to give a series of lectures on "Practical Natural Language Processing" due to her work at MIT, expanding the fields of transfer and meta learning, educational outreach, natural language understanding, and computational creativity. [11]

She is co-author of 7 peer-reviewed journal articles on AI and language, and many per-reviewed major conference presentations,[12]

Selected publications

Most cited publication

Other publications

Notes and References

  1. News: Campbell. MacGregor. AI scores same as a 4-year-old in verbal IQ test. 24 June 2015. New Scientist. 23 July 2013.
  2. News: Titlow. John Paul. The 100 Most Creative People in Business 2015: Catherine In the 1990s, Havasi invented crowd-sourcing for artificial intelligence (Havasi About). Havasi. 20 May 2015. Fast Company. June 2015.
  3. Web site: Catherine Havasi . 2024-03-20 . Society for Science . en-US.
  4. News: Havasi. Catherine. Who's Doing Common-Sense Reasoning And Why It Matters. 3 March 2015. TechCrunch. 9 August 2014.
  5. News: Harris. David. 40 Under 40: Catherine Havasi of Luminoso. 3 March 2015. Boston Business Journal. 16 October 2014.
  6. Web site: Catherine Havasi . 2024-03-20 . Society for Science . en-US.
  7. News: Cline. Keith. Dr. Catherine Havasi – From the MIT Media Lab to Co-Founder & CEO. 20 May 2015. Venture Fizz. 25 June 2014. 17 August 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180817194754/https://venturefizz.com/node/37289. dead.
  8. Web site: Catherine Havasi . 2024-03-20 . Society for Science . en-US.
  9. Web site: ABOUT . 2024-03-20 . Catherine Havasi . en.
  10. News: Alba. Davey. Davey Alba. The Startup That Helps You Analyze Twitter Chatter in Real Time. 3 March 2015. Wired. 12 February 2015.
  11. Web site: Portugal . U. S. Mission . 2019-07-11 . Catherine Havasi MIT AI Scientist in Portugal . 2024-03-20 . U.S. Embassy & Consulate in Portugal . en-US.
  12. Web site: Catherine Havasi. scholar.google. Google Scholar. 24 June 2015.