Deborah McGuinness explained

Birth Name:Deborah Louise McGuinness
Deborah L. McGuinness
Awards:Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (2014)
Thesis Url:https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/80173555
Thesis Title:Explaining reasoning in description logics
Thesis Year:1996
Fields:Semantic Web
Ontologies
Artificial Intelligence
Data Science
Health Informatics
Alma Mater:Duke University (BS)
University of California at Berkeley (MS)
Rutgers University (PhD)
Workplaces:Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Stanford University
Doctoral Advisor:Alexander Tiberiu Borgida
Website:https://www.cs.rpi.edu/~dlm/

Deborah Louise McGuinness (born ca. 1960) is an American computer scientist and researcher at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI). She is a professor of Computer, Cognitive and Web Sciences, Industrial and Systems Engineering, and an endowed chair in the Tetherless World Constellation, a multidisciplinary research institution within RPI that focuses on the study of theories, methods and applications of the World Wide Web. Her fields of expertise include interdisciplinary data integration, artificial intelligence, specifically in knowledge representation and reasoning, description logics, the semantic web, explanation, and trust.

Education

McGuinness completed her Ph.D. in computer science from Rutgers University in 1997 with a thesis titled “Explaining Reasoning in Description Logics”. She received a master's degree in computer science from the University of California, Berkeley (1981) and a Bachelor of Science in computer science and Bachelor of Arts (BA) in mathematics from Duke University (1980).

Career

McGuinness’ career began in 1980 as a technical staff member for AT&T Bell Labs where for eighteen years, she worked in Artificial Intelligence applied and fundamental research, with business rotations in Home Information Systems, Home Communication Systems and managed an emerging technologies and applications group for AT&T's personal online services.

From 1998 to 2007, McGuinness served as co-director and senior research scientist and later acting director in the Knowledge Systems Laboratory (KSL), Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at Stanford University.[1]

In October 2007, she joined the faculty at RPI and became an endowed constellation chair with James Hendler, within the Tetherless World Constellation. While at RPI, she became the founding director of the Web Science Research Center and Director of Health Analytics at the Institute for Data Exploration and Application (IDEA).[2]

McGuinness is CEO and president of her own consulting firm for clients wishing to plan, develop, deploy, and maintain semantic web and/or AI applications.

She also is an inventor on 5 patents and has served as an expert witness in a number of cases, many in the area of configuration.[3]

Research

McGuinness has worked in knowledge representation and reasoning environments, and their applications, for over 40 years. She has led multimillion-dollar, government sponsored research efforts, many in multi-disciplinary areas, delivering long-lived software and world class publishable results on topics including but not limited to health, exposure, cancer, smoking and drug repurposing research.

McGuinness is known for her work on description logics, particularly her work on the CLASSIC knowledge representation system, explanation components for description logics, and a number of applications of description logics such as the PROSE and QUESTAR configurators from AT&T and Lucent Laboratories. She was integral in the creation of DARPA Agent Markup Language (DAML) and the KSL Wine Agent.

She co-authored the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)'s recommendation for an Ontology Web Language (OWL) and provenance language (PROV) recommendations and the Proof Markup Language (PML) for representing knowledge provenance. She started Stanford's explanation effort, called Inference Web, that aims to provide infrastructure for improving trust and understand-ability of answers in distributed environments, such as the web.

Through her involvement in a variety of research areas, including those mentioned above, McGuiness is successfully leading the design and development of multi-disciplinary health and environmental informatics platforms and applications. Notable recent projects include: the Health Empowerment by Analytics, Learning, and Semantics (HEALS) project,[4] a joint IBM-RPI effort; the Human and Children's Health Exposure Analysis Resource projects (HHEAR)[5] and (CHEAR),[6] funded by NIH; the DARPA-funded Machine Commonsense (MCS) program and the Multi-modal Open World Grounded Learning and Inference (MOWGLI) project[7] and a Food Security project; the Human-Aware Data Acquisition Infrastructure (HADatAc) project,[8] the Jefferson project,[9] a joint IBM Research, RPI and Lake George Association collaboration, and the MaterialsMine project.[10]

Honors and awards

Academic and Industrial Boards

Publications

Books
Journals, a selection

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Stanford Knowledge Systems, AI Laboratory. ksl.stanford.edu. 2022-04-13. 2005-09-12. https://web.archive.org/web/20050912031112/http://ksl.stanford.edu/. dead.
  2. Web site: Institute for Data Exploration and Applications (IDEA) | Institute for Data Exploration and Applications (IDEA). idea.rpi.edu.
  3. http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Application-Development/Sun-Successfully-Defends-Itself-Against-100M-Patent-Suit-694198/{{Dead link|date=October 2022 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  4. Web site: Health Empowerment by Analytics, Learning, and Semantics (HEALS) | Tetherless World Constellation. tw.rpi.edu.
  5. Web site: Human Health Exposure Analysis Repository (HHEAR) | Tetherless World Constellation. tw.rpi.edu.
  6. Web site: CHEAR (Child Health Exposure Analysis Repository) | Tetherless World Constellation.
  7. Web site: Machine Common Sense (MCS) Multi-modal Open World Grounded Learning and Inference (MOWGLI) | Tetherless World Constellation.
  8. Web site: The Human-Aware Data Acquisition Infrastructure (HADatAc) | Tetherless World Constellation. tw.rpi.edu.
  9. Web site: Jefferson Project at Lake George |.
  10. Web site: MaterialsMine: An open-source, user-friendly materials data resource guided by FAIR principles | Tetherless World Constellation. tw.rpi.edu.
  11. Web site: 2023 ACM Fellows Celebrated for Contributions to Computing That Underpin Our Daily Lives. Media center. Association for Computing Machinery. 2024-01-25.
  12. Web site: Elected AAAI Fellows. aaai.org.
  13. Web site: The Knowledge Graph Conference Lifetime Achievement Award. www.knowledgegraph.tech.
  14. Web site: SWSA Ten-Year Award | swsa. swsa.semanticweb.org.
  15. Web site: Awards.
  16. Web site: Deborah L. McGuinness Named Fellow of the AAAS | Science at Rensselaer.
  17. Web site: Deborah McGuinness Named Fellow of the AAAS. Tracey. Leibach.
  18. Web site: Robert S. Engelmore Memorial Lecture Award. aaai.org.
  19. Web site: HICSS Best Papers – HICSS .
  20. Web site: Distinguished Alumni. www.cs.rutgers.edu.
  21. Web site: Information, Computing, and Communication (T) | American Association for the Advancement of Science. www.aaas.org.