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Encyclopedia > Ray Kurzweil

Dr. Raymond Kurzweil (born February 12, 1948) is a pioneer in the fields of optical character recognition (OCR), text-to-speech synthesis, speech recognition technology, and electronic musical keyboards. He is author of several books on health, artificial intelligence, transhumanism, and technological singularity.


He earned a bachelor's degree in 1970 from MIT.


Kurzweil was the principal developer of the first omni-font optical character recognition, the first print-to-speech reading machine for the blind, the first CCD flatbed scanner, the first text-to-speech synthesizer, the first music synthesizer capable of recreating the grand piano and other orchestral instruments, and the first commercially marketed large-vocabulary speech recognition. He has founded nine businesses in OCR, music synthesis, speech recognition, reading technology, virtual reality, financial investment, medical simulation, and cybernetic art.


Kurzweil was inducted in 2002 into the National Inventors Hall of Fame, established by the U.S. Patent Office. He received the $500,000 Lemelson-MIT Prize, United States' largest award in invention and innovation, and the 1999 National Medal of Technology, the nation's highest honor in technology.


He has also received scores of other awards, including the 1994 Dickson Prize (Carnegie Mellon University's top science prize), Engineer of the Year from Design News, Inventor of the Year from MIT in 1998, the Association of American Publishers' award for the Most Outstanding Computer Science Book of 1990, and the Grace Murray Hopper Award from the Association for Computing Machinery. He has received eleven honorary doctorates, and honors from three U.S. presidents.


In December 2004, Kurzweil joined the advisory board of the Singularity Institute for Artificial Intelligence.


Kurzweil is also an enthusiastic advocate of using technology to achieve immortality. He advocates using nanobots to maintain the human body, but given their present non-existence he adheres instead to a strict daily routine involving ingesting "250 supplements, eight to 10 glasses of alkaline water and 10 cups of green tea." [1] (http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,66585,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_3)


Published books

Kurzweil is the co-author (and subject) of the 2002 book Are We Spiritual Machines?: Ray Kurzweil vs. the Critics of Strong A.I.. He also wrote the introduction to the 2003 computer graphics book Virtual Humans and collaborated with the Canadian band Our Lady Peace for their 2000 album Spiritual Machines.


External links

  • Official Biography (http://www.kurzweiltech.com/aboutray.html)
  • Machine Dreams (http://www.cio.com/archive/101504/interview.html) - CIO Magazine interview
  • KurzweilAI.net (http://www.kurzweilai.net/) - a VAST resource, including some of his books for free
  • Detailed Official Biography (http://www.kurzweilai.net/bios/bio0005.html?printable=1)
  • Warfighting in the 21 st Century - The Remote, Robotic, Robust, Size-Reduced, Virtual Reality Paradigm (http://www.asc2004.com/Presentations/01-Monday/06-Kurzweil.pdf) - Keynote address (PDF Document), 24th Army Science Conference, given on November 29, 2004
  • Robot Wars (http://www.nature.com/news/2005/050207/pf/050207-7_pf.html) - news@nature site interview, February 8, 2005

  Results from FactBites:
 
The age of Ray Kurzweil - The Boston Globe (2144 words)
Ray Kurzweil, the company's founder, is an inventor, and has been one for as long as he can remember.
Kurzweil is compact and trim, with full cheeks, a small smile, and a knot-like nose drooping toward a broad chin.
For Kurzweil, however, the explosive power of exponential growth goes far beyond transistors: Human technological advancement, the billions of years of terrestrial evolution, the entire history of the universe, all, he argues, follow the law of accelerating returns.
Ray Kurzweil Aims to Live Forever | LiveScience (1319 words)
Kurzweil says his critics often fail to appreciate the exponential nature of technological advance, with knowledge doubling year by year so that amazing progress eventually occurs in short periods.
Kurzweil's grandfather and father suffered from heart disease, his father dying when Kurzweil was 22.
Kurzweil writes that humanity is on the verge of controlling how genes express themselves and ultimately changing the genes.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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