Computational models of artificial intelligence; autonomous systems; intelligent information systems
PhD Computer Science, Ben-Gurion University
Computational models of artificial intelligence; autonomous systems; intelligent information systems
Carmel Domshlak is a Professor in the Technion Faculty of Data and Decision Sciences and a former Dean. His research interests include computational and modeling problems that are fundamental to intelligent autonomous behavior, with an emphasis on intricate connections found in different tasks of automated reasoning, such as sequential decision-making and action planning, multi-agent system design, preferential reasoning, and probabilistic inference. In recent years, a substantial part of his work has been devoted to goal-driven action planning in concisely specified transition systems and Monte-Carlo algorithms for online sequential decision-making. With 20 years of AI and machine learning experience, Domshlak has written numerous papers on artificial intelligence, preferential reasoning, probabilistic reasoning, and automated decision support systems.