Skip to main content
guest
Join
|
Help
|
Sign In
chessprogramming
Home
guest
|
Join
|
Help
|
Sign In
Wiki Home
Recent Changes
Pages and Files
Members
Home
Basics
Getting Started
Board Representation
Search
Evaluation
Principle Topics
Chess
Programming
Artificial Intelligence
Knowledge
Learning
Testing
Tuning
User Interface
Protocols
Dictionary
Lists
Arts
Cartoons
CC Forums
Conferences
Dedicated CC
Engines
Games
Hardware
History
Organizations
Papers
People
Periodical
Samples
Software
Timeline
Tournaments and Matches
Videos
Misc
Acknowledgments
On New Pages
Recommended Reading
Wikispaces Help
Michael Greenspan
Edit
0
11
…
2
Tags
people
researcher
Notify
RSS
Backlinks
Source
Print
Export (PDF)
Home
*
People
* Michael Greenspan
Michael Greenspan
,
a Canadian electrical engineer, computer scientist and associate professor and head of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at
Queen's University
. He holds a
B.Sc.
in
physics
and
applied mathematics
in 1986 from
University of Toronto
, a
B.A.Sc.
and
M.A.Sc.
in
electrical engineering
from
University of Ottawa
in 1989 and 1991 respectively, and a Ph.D. in
systems
and
computer engineering
from
Carleton University
,
Ottawa
in 1991 as well
[1]
. His research interests are in the area of
computer vision
, especially
object recognition
and pose determination as they apply in
robotics
[2]
. Along with his students, Michael Greenspan worked on
Pool
simulation, and was affiliated with competitions at three
Computer Olympiads
.
Michael Greenspan
[3]
Table of Contents
Photos
Selected Publications
External Links
References
What links here?
Photos
Michael Greenspan (front right)
watching
the
Pool
competition at the
11th Computer Olympiad
[4]
Selected Publications
[5]
[6]
Will Leckie
,
Michael Greenspan
(
2005
).
An Event-Based Pool Physics Simulator
.
Advances in Computer Games 11
Michael Greenspan
(
2005
).
Uofa wins Pool tournament
.
ICGA Journal, Vol. 28, No. 3
,
pdf
»
10th Computer Olympiad
Will Leckie
,
Michael Greenspan
(
2005
).
Pool Physics Simulation by Event Prediction 1: Motion Transitions
.
ICGA Journal, Vol. 28, No. 4
,
pdf
Will Leckie
,
Michael Greenspan
(
2006
).
Pool Physics Simulation by Event Prediction 2: Collisions
.
ICGA Journal, Vol. 29, No. 1
Will Leckie
,
Michael Greenspan
(
2006
).
Monte-Carlo Methods in Pool Strategy Game Trees
.
CG 2006
Michael Greenspan
(
2006
).
PickPocket wins Pool tournament
.
ICGA Journal, Vol. 29, No. 3
»
11th Computer Olympiad
Michael Greenspan
,
Marc Godard
,
Joseph Lam
,
Donna Dupuis
,
Will Leckie
,
Sam Jordan
,
Imran Zaidi
,
Ken Anderson
(
2008
).
Toward a Competitive Pool-Playing Robot
. Computer, Vol. 41
Christopher Archibald
,
Alon Altman
,
Michael Greenspan
,
Yoav Shoham
(
2010
).
Computational Pool: A New Challenge for Game Theory Pragmatics
.
AI Magazine
, Vol. 31, No. 4
External Links
Michael Greenspan - Electrical and Computer Engineering - Queens University
Michael Greenspan - Homepage
References
^
Michael Greenspan at Queens University
^
Michael Greenspan Home
^
During an Interview at the
11th Computer Olympiad
with
Stefan Löffler
, Clipped from
ICGA News - Olympiad 2006 Photos
^
Computer Olympiad in Torino, Italy
, Photo gallery by
Hiroshi Yamashita
^
ICGA Reference Database
(pdf)
^
DBLP: Michael Greenspan
What links here?
Page
Date Edited
10th Computer Olympiad
Jul 22, 2017
11th Computer Olympiad
Jul 22, 2017
Advances in Computer Games 11
Dec 27, 2016
CG 2006
Dec 28, 2016
ICGA Journal
Dec 21, 2017
Michael Greenspan
Dec 29, 2016
People
Feb 28, 2018
Stefan Löffler
Dec 29, 2016
University of Toronto
Dec 8, 2017
Will Leckie
Dec 28, 2016
Up one level
Javascript Required
You need to enable Javascript in your browser to edit pages.
help on how to format text
Turn off "Getting Started"
Home
...
Loading...
a Canadian electrical engineer, computer scientist and associate professor and head of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Queen's University. He holds a B.Sc. in physics and applied mathematics in 1986 from University of Toronto, a B.A.Sc. and M.A.Sc. in electrical engineering from University of Ottawa in 1989 and 1991 respectively, and a Ph.D. in systems and computer engineering from Carleton University, Ottawa in 1991 as well [1] . His research interests are in the area of computer vision, especially object recognition and pose determination as they apply in robotics [2] . Along with his students, Michael Greenspan worked on Pool simulation, and was affiliated with competitions at three Computer Olympiads.
Table of Contents
Photos
Selected Publications
[5] [6]External Links
References
What links here?
Up one level