Joscha Bach | |
Birth Date: | 21 December 1973 |
Birth Place: | Weimar, Germany |
Alma Mater: | Humboldt University of Berlin (MA) Osnabrück University (PhD) |
Fields: | Cognitive Science Artificial Intelligence Computer Science |
Nationality: | German |
Workplaces: | Intel AI Foundation Harvard MIT Media Lab |
Thesis Title: | Principles of Synthetic Intelligence; Building Blocks for an Architecture of Motivated Cognition |
Thesis Year: | 2006 |
Thesis Url: | http://cognitive-ai.com/publications/assets/Draft-MicroPsi-JBach-07-03-30.pdf |
Doctoral Advisor: | Dietrich Dörner Kai-Uwe Kühnberger |
Joscha Bach (born 1973 in Weimar, East Germany) is a German artificial intelligence researcher and cognitive scientist focusing on cognitive architectures, mental representation, emotion, social modeling, and multi-agent systems.[1]
Bach was born and grew up in East Germany. His parents are architect and artist Jochen Bach, and Gisa Bach. He is part of the Bach family.
He received an MA (computer science) from Humboldt-Universität Berlin in 2000 and a PhD (cognitive science) from Osnabrück University in 2006.[2] [3] [4] [5]
Bach has taught computer science, AI, and cognitive science at the Humboldt-University of Berlin and the Institute for Cognitive Science at Osnabrück. He worked as a visiting researcher at the MIT Media Lab and the Harvard Program for Evolutionary Dynamics.[6]
He then joined AI Foundation, working as VP of Research.[5] Between March 2021 and January 2023, he was a Principal AI Engineer at Intel Labs Cognitive Computing group.[7] He currently serves on AI Foundation's Advisory Council.[8]
Bach built MicroPsi, a cognitive architecture extending representations of the Psi-theory with taxonomies, inheritance and linguistic labeling; MicroPsi's spreading activation networks allow for neural learning, planning and associative retrieval.[9] [10] [11]
Bach is the author of around 25 academic publications,[12] and has written a book on cognitive science called Principles of Synthetic Intelligence.[13] [14]
He has also worked extensively on novel data compression algorithm using concurrent entropy models.[15]
Between 2013 and 2017, Bach was attributed research funding by Jeffrey Epstein charitable funds, according to fact-finding reports from Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[16] [17] [18]