Demis Hassabis

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Demis Hassabis
Born (1976-07-27) 27 July 1976 (age 47)
London
Nationality British
Fields <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Institutions <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Alma mater <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Thesis Neural processes underpinning episodic memory (2009)
Doctoral advisor Eleanor Maguire[2]
Known for <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Influences Peter Molyneux
Notable awards <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Website
www.demishassabis.com

Demis Hassabis (born 27 July 1976) is an artificial intelligence researcher, neuroscientist, computer game designer, and world-class gamer.[1][3][4][5][6][7]

Early life

Demis Hassabis was born to a father of Greek Cypriot descent, and a mother who was Chinese-Singaporean. He grew up in North London, around Finchley and Hendon, and he continues to reside near there.[8][9]

Education

A child prodigy in chess, Hassabis reached master standard at the age of 13 with an Elo rating of 2300 (at the time the second highest rated player in the world Under-14 after Judit Polgár who had a rating of 2335, and is 4 days older than Hassabis).[10] After finishing his high school A-Level and S-level exams at 16 he began his computer games career at Bullfrog Productions, first level designing on Syndicate and then at 17 co-designing and lead programming on the classic game Theme Park, with the games designer Peter Molyneux. Theme Park, a celebrated simulation game, sold several million copies and won a Golden Joystick Award, and inspired a whole genre of management sim games. Hassabis then left Bullfrog to take up his place at Queens' College, Cambridge where he studied the Computer Science Tripos graduating in 1997 with a Double First[10] from the Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge. After running companies for several years, Hassabis returned to academia to obtain his PhD in Cognitive Neuroscience from University College London (UCL) in 2009[2] and continued his neuroscience and artificial intelligence research as a Wellcome Trust Research Fellow at the Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit, UCL and as a visiting scientist jointly at MIT and Harvard.[4]

Career

Following his graduation from Cambridge, Hassabis worked as a lead AI programmer on the Lionhead Studios title Black & White before founding Elixir Studios in 1998, a London-based independent games developer. He grew the company to 60 people, signing publishing deals with Eidos Interactive, Vivendi Universal and Microsoft, and was the executive designer of the BAFTA-nominated Republic: The Revolution and Evil Genius games.

The release of Elixir's first game, Republic: The Revolution, a highly ambitious and unusual political simulation game,[11] was delayed several times. The final game was reduced from its original vision and greeted with lukewarm reviews, receiving a Metacritic score of 62/100. Evil Genius fared much better with a score of 77/100. In April 2005 the intellectual property and technology rights were sold to various publishers and the studio was closed.

Hassabis then left the video game industry, switching to cognitive neuroscience, in order to find inspiration from the brain for new algorithmic ideas for AI.[12] Working in the field of autobiographical memory and amnesia he authored several influential papers.[1] His most highly cited paper,[13] published in PNAS, argued that patients with damage to their hippocampus, known to cause amnesia, were also unable to imagine themselves in new experiences. Importantly this established a link between the constructive process of imagination and the reconstructive process of episodic memory recall. Based on these findings and a follow-up fMRI study,[14] Hassabis developed his ideas into a new theoretical account of the episodic memory system identifying scene construction, the generation and online maintenance of a complex and coherent scene, as a key process underlying both memory recall and imagination.[15] This work was widely covered in the mainstream media[16] and was listed in the top 10 scientific breakthroughs of the year (at number 9) in any field by the journal Science.[17]

Recently some of Hassabis' findings and interpretations have been challenged by other researchers. A paper by Larry R. Squire and colleagues [18] reported a dissociation between hippocampal lesions and imagination deficits as well as between amnesia and imagination deficits. Furthermore, Squire and colleagues questioned whether the lesions of the patients tested by Hassabis and colleagues were restricted to the hippocampus. Recent studies support the original findings,[19] although the debate is ongoing.[20]

In 2011, he co-founded and was CEO of DeepMind Technologies, a London-based machine learning startup, specializing in building general-purpose learning algorithms.

In January 2014 DeepMind was acquired by Google for a reported £400 million (approximately $625 million), where Hassabis is now Vice President of Engineering leading their general AI projects.[4][21][22][23][24][25][26]

Awards and honours

Hassabis won the world games championship (called the 'Pentamind') at the Mind Sports Olympiad a record five times, prior to his retirement from competitive play in 2003, and at the time was regarded as the best all-round games player in the world.[27] He is an expert player of many games including chess, Diplomacy, shogi and poker. He has cashed at the World Series of Poker six times including in the Main Event.

Hassabis was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (FRSA) in 2009 for his game design work.[28] He was awarded the prestigious Mullard Award by the Royal Society in 2014.[29] He was included in the 2013 'Smart 50' list by Wired,[30] and listed as the third most influential Londoner in 2014 by the London Evening Standard newspaper.[31]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Demis Hassabis's publications indexed by Google Scholar, a service provided by Google
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  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Demis Hassabis at the Internet Movie Database
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  5. Demis Hassabis at MobyGames
  6. Demis Hassabis rating card at FIDE
  7. Demis Hassabis: the secretive computer boffin with the £400 million brain Daily Telegraph 2014-01-28
  8. Exclusive interview: meet Demis Hassabis, London's megamind who just sold his company to Google for £400m Evening Standard 2014-01-31
  9. Lunch with the FT: Demis Hassabis Financial Times 2015-01-30
  10. 10.0 10.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  11. Game plays politics with your PC, BBC, Alfred Hermida, 3 September 2003 http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/3201221.stm retrieved 2011-04-29
  12. Nature Commentary http://www.gatsby.ucl.ac.uk/~demis/TuringSpecialIssue(Nature2012).pdf
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  16. NY Times Article
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  29. Mullard Award press release
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  31. London's top 1000 most influential people