Tony Marsland received his B.Sc. in Honours Mathematics from the University of Nottingham (UK, 1958) and M.S.E(E) and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering from the University of Washington, Seattle (USA, 1967). After working one year as an assistant professor he went to AT&T Bell Laboratories in New Jersey for two years as a research scientist, before joining the Computing Science Department at the University of Alberta. He was an ACM National Lecturer during 1979-81 and a McCalla Research Professor in 1985-86. His primary teaching and research interests were in the area of distributed computing systems design.
In the past, Tony served on a variety of General and Faculty committees, and completed one term as Associate Chair of Computing Science with primary responsibility for the Graduate Program. After helping for many years on NSERC's International Relations Committee, he spent much of the 1994 academic year visiting the University of Hong Kong. In addition to normal teaching and research activities he was President of the International Computer Chess Association (1992-99). Separately, he has edited two books and written three lengthy encyclopedic articles in recent years.
Despite years of programming experience with languages like Assembly, Fortran, Snobol, Lisp, Pascal and C (and the many arcane scripting languages on Unix Systems), he is now happy to let others do the real work while he enjoys modern computer interfaces for day to day use and communication!
After many years as a Professional Engineer (member of APEGGA) he has a continuing special interest in the Industrial Internship Program (IIP) (which he directed 1994-2002) and in maintaining good external contacts.
Paul Rushton, Tony Marsland (1973). Current Chess Programs: A Summary of their Potential and Limitations. INFOR Journal of the Canadian Information Processing Society Vol. 11, No. 1, pdf
Tony Marsland, Paul Rushton (1973). A Study of Techniques for Game-Playing Programs. Journal of Computer Science, Vol. 4, No. 2, pdf
Tony Marsland, Paul Rushton (1974). A Study of Techniques for Game-Playing Programs. Advances in Cybernetics and Systems (ed. J. Rose), Vol. 1, pp. 363-371. Gordon & Breach, pdf
Tony Marsland (1982). A Quantitative Study of Refinements to the Alpha-Beta Algorithm. Technical Report TR82-6. Department of Computing Science, University of Alberta, pdf
Tony Marsland, Tim Breitkreutz, Steve Sutphen (1991). A Network Multiprocessor for Experiments in Parallelism. Concurrency: Practice and Experience, Vol. 3, No. 3, pp. 203-219. pdf
Tony Marsland, Yngvi Björnsson. (1997) From MiniMax to Manhattan. In Deep Blue Versus Kasparov: The Significance for Artificial Intelligence. AAAI Workshop, pp. 31–36, 1997. pdf
Yngvi Björnsson, Tony Marsland (2001). Multi-cut Alpha-Beta Pruning in Game Tree Search. Theoretical Computer Science, Vol. 252, pp. 177-196. pdf
Yngvi Björnsson, Tony Marsland (2002). Learning Control of Search Extensions. Proceedings of the 6th Joint Conference on Information Sciences (JCIS 2002), pp. 446-449. pdf
a Canadian computer scientist and game researcher from the University of Alberta. Tony Marsland is co-creator and eponym of the Principal Variation Search. Until about 1986 he worked extensively on the selective search computer chess programs Marsland CP (aka Wita) and Awit/Wita [1] [2], written in AlgolW, and participated with it in many North American and World Computer Chess Championships [3] . Along with Fred Popowich, Tony is further co-author of the experimental parallel chess program Parabelle, and with Chun Ye co-author of the Chinese Chess program and shared gold medal winner at the 3rd Computer Olympiad, Abyss. From 1992 until 1999, Tony Marsland served as President of the ICCA. He is now Professor Emeritus at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
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Dave Slate, David Levy, Claude Shannon, Ken Thompson, Betty Shannon, Tom Truscott [5]
About Tony Marsland
Quote from Tony Marsland's biography [7] :In the past, Tony served on a variety of General and Faculty committees, and completed one term as Associate Chair of Computing Science with primary responsibility for the Graduate Program. After helping for many years on NSERC's International Relations Committee, he spent much of the 1994 academic year visiting the University of Hong Kong. In addition to normal teaching and research activities he was President of the International Computer Chess Association (1992-99). Separately, he has edited two books and written three lengthy encyclopedic articles in recent years.
Despite years of programming experience with languages like Assembly, Fortran, Snobol, Lisp, Pascal and C (and the many arcane scripting languages on Unix Systems), he is now happy to let others do the real work while he enjoys modern computer interfaces for day to day use and communication!
After many years as a Professional Engineer (member of APEGGA) he has a continuing special interest in the Industrial Internship Program (IIP) (which he directed 1994-2002) and in maintaining good external contacts.
Selected Publications
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