Rick Hayes-Roth


Frederick Hayes-Roth is an American computer scientist and educator.
His principal work focuses on how to use computing processes to winnow data down to only those information items that are valuable to the receiver, using technology to deliver those items, and in designing IT systems structured for this task. Frederick Hayes-Roth is also known as Rick Roth and has published under the names Rick Hayes-Roth and Frederick Roth.

Career

He was the Chief Technology Officer for Software at Hewlett-Packard from 2000 to 2001. Before that he was chairman and chief executive of two Silicon Valley companies which he co-founded. One was Teknowledge Corporation, founded with Edward Feigenbaum.
He was the program director for research in Information Processing at the Rand Corporation from 1976 to 1981. That research program was prolific and influential, leading to numerous systems and research paradigms, including the Opportunistic Model of Planning, the rule-based system , a number of heuristic expert systems, Distributed Fleet Control, and methods for non-monotonic reasoning and learning in knowledge networks.
Prior to that, was one of the co-inventors of the first continuous speech understanding systems, Hearsay-II, which became the “blackboard architecture.”
Hayes-Roth held faculty positions at MIT, Stanford, and Carnegie Mellon. In 2003 he became a professor in the Information Sciences Department at the United States Navy's Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California. At NPS he has taught hundreds of mid-career leaders in DOD through his "capstone course" on IT Strategy and Policy at NPS. The focus of that course has been on ways to radically improve the success of DOD IT system efforts.
In 2011, Hayes-Roth co-founded Truth Seal Corporation, a non-profit, in a response to the glut of information that makes it difficult to judge the veracity of information.
He is a Fellow of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence, which cited him as follows:
Hayes-Roth is also a senior member of the IEEE and a member of the Association for Computing Machinery.