Gerd Veenker, (1936 - 1996)
was a German mathematician, computer scientist, AI researcher, and professor for CS and AI at University of Bonn[1]. He received his Ph.D. in 1967 on first-ordertheorem proving at University of Tübingen, where his advisors include Karl Longin Zeller. Already during the early 60s in Tübingen, along with his fellow Frieder Schwenkel, Gerd Veenker developed a particular interest in non-numeric computation such as game playing and theorem proving [2]. In 1965, he published a paper on a chess program to find a mate in two or three moves [3], but his focus remained on theorem proving where his scientific contributions are in the field of automatic deduction.
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Gerd Veenker, (1936 - 1996)
was a German mathematician, computer scientist, AI researcher, and professor for CS and AI at University of Bonn [1]. He received his Ph.D. in 1967 on first-order theorem proving at University of Tübingen, where his advisors include Karl Longin Zeller. Already during the early 60s in Tübingen, along with his fellow Frieder Schwenkel, Gerd Veenker developed a particular interest in non-numeric computation such as game playing and theorem proving [2]. In 1965, he published a paper on a chess program to find a mate in two or three moves [3], but his focus remained on theorem proving where his scientific contributions are in the field of automatic deduction.
Selected Publications
[4]External Links
References
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