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Arthur Earl Bryson Jr. (born October 7, 1925) [2] is the Paul Pigott Professor of Engineering Emeritus at Stanford University and the "father of modern optimal control theory". [ citation needed ] With Henry J. Kelley , he also pioneered an early version of the backpropagation procedure, [ 3 ] [ 4 ] [ 5 ] now widely used for machine learning ...
Arthur E. Bryson (born 1925) – "father of modern optimal control theory" Carl Clemens Bücker (1895–1976) – founder of Bücker-Flugzeugbau GmbH; Viktor Bugaisky (1912–1994) – designed the Functional Cargo Block of several space missions; Isabelle Buret – engineer specializing in telecommunications and astronautics
Arthur E. Bryson, Jr., professor emeritus in Aeronautics and Astronautics, father of modern optimal control theory; Roland Doré, former president of the Canadian Space Agency; William F. Durand, professor and head of Mechanical Engineering (1904–24), aerodynamics pioneer and chair of NASA forerunner NACA
Richard E. Bellman Control Heritage Award (1989), IEEE Control Systems Award (1991), Rufus Oldenburger Medal (2005), Giorgio Quazza Medal (2017) Arthur E. Bryson, Jr. Stanford University: American 1925 Rufus Oldenburger Medal (1980), IEEE Control Systems Award (1984), Richard E. Bellman Control Heritage Award (1990) Peter E. Caines: McGill ...
The John E. Bryson Stock Index From January 2008 to June 2011, if you bought shares in companies when John E. Bryson joined the board, and sold them when he left, you would have a 2.7 percent return on your investment, compared to a -13.4 percent return from the S&P 500.
We counted how many Clinton and/or Trump followers wrote each stemmed token (e.g., “work”). Then we did the same for each pair of stemmed tokens (e.g., “work full”), each trio of stemmed tokens (“work full time”), and so on, up to each sequence of 10 stemmed tokens. We called these sequences of stemmed tokens groups.
Hecht-Nielsen [22] credits the Robbins–Monro algorithm (1951) [23] and Arthur Bryson and Yu-Chi Ho's Applied Optimal Control (1969) as presages of backpropagation. Other precursors were Henry J. Kelley 1960, [2] and Arthur E. Bryson (1961). [3] In 1962, Stuart Dreyfus published a simpler derivation based only on the chain rule.
President Donald Trump repeated false claims about the US trade relationship with Canada and Europe in virtual Thursday remarks to the World Economic Forum in Davos. He also delivered a smattering ...