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  1. Peter Stone is a former Assistant State's Attorney in Chicago, and the former assistant district attorney for the Special Victims Unit in New York City. Contents. 1History. 2On the Job. 3Trivia. 4Appearances. History. Stone was the second child born to former E.A.D.A. Benjamin Stone.

  2. I am the founder and director of the Learning Agents Research Group (LARG) within the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory in the Department of Computer Science at The University of Texas at Austin, as well as associate department chair and Director of Texas Robotics .

  3. Peter Stone is an American computer scientist who is the David Bruton Jr. Centennial Professor of Computer Science at the University of Texas at Austin. He is also an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow, Guggenheim Fellow, AAAI Fellow, and Fulbright Scholar.

    • American
  4. 1029 *. 1998. Multiagent traffic management: A reservation-based intersection control mechanism. K Dresner, P Stone. Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems, International Joint Conference on …. , 2004. 859. 2004. Policy gradient reinforcement learning for fast quadrupedal locomotion.

  5. 2 giorni fa · Prof. Stone is currently continuing his investigation of machine learning, multiagent learning, and robotics at UT Austin. Application domains include robot soccer, autonomous traffic management, and human-interactive robots.

  6. 1 set 2016 · Peter Stone, a professor of computer science at The University of Texas at Austin, led a groundbreaking study on artificial intelligence (AI) being released today. The study, produced by a panel of 17 experts from around the world, looks at how specialized applications of AI might affect life in a typical North American city by the year 2030.

  7. Sortition, voting, and democratic equality. P Stone. Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 19 (3), 339-356. , 2016. 37. 2016. Sortition and Mini-Publics: a different kind of representation. D Farrell, P Stone. The Oxford Handbook of political representation in liberal Democracies, 228-246.