Keith Clark (computer scientist)

Keith Leonard Clark (born 29 March 1943) is an Emeritus Professor in the Department of Computing at Imperial College London, England.[1]: 723 

Keith L. Clark
Born1943 (age 80–81)
NationalityBritish
Alma mater
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions
ThesisPredicate Logic as a Computational Formalism (1980)
Doctoral advisorRobert Kowalski
Websitewww.doc.ic.ac.uk/~klc/

Education edit

Clark studied Mathematics at Durham University (Hatfield College), graduating in 1964 with a first-class degree.[2][3] Clark then continued his studies at Cambridge University, taking a second undergraduate degree in Philosophy in 1966.[3] He earned a Ph.D. in 1980 from the University of London with thesis titled Predicate logic as a computational formalism.[4]

Career edit

Clark undertook Voluntary Service Overseas from 1967 to 1968 as a teacher of Mathematics at a school in Sierra Leone.[3] He lectured in Computer Science at the Mathematics Department of Queen Mary College from 1969 to 1975. In 1975 he moved to Imperial College London, where he became a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Computer Science and joined Robert Kowalski in setting up the logic programming group.[5] From 1987 to 2009 he was Professor of Computational Logic at Imperial College.[3]

Clark's key contributions have been in the field of logic programming.[6] His current research interests include multi-agent systems, cognitive robotics and multi-threading.[7]

Business Interests edit

In 1980, with colleague Frank McCabe, he founded an Imperial College spin-off company, Logic Programming Associates, to develop and market Prolog systems for microcomputers (micro-Prolog) and to provide consultancy on expert systems and other logic programming applications.[3][8] The company's star product was MacProlog. It had a user interface exploiting all the graphic user interface primitives of the Mac's OS, and primitives allowing bespoke Prolog-based applications to be built with application specific interfaces. Clark has also acted as a consultant to IBM, Hewlett-Packard and Fujitsu among other companies.[3]

Selected publications edit

  • K. L. Clark, D. Cowell, Programs, Machines and Computation, McGraw-Hill, London, 1976.
  • K. L. Clark, S-A. Tarnlund, A first order theory of data and programs, Proc. IFIP Congress, Toronto, 939–944 pp, 1977.
  • K. L. Clark, Negation as failure, Logic and Data Bases (eds. Gallaire & Minker) Plenum Press, New York, 293–322 pp, 1978. (Also in Readings in Nonmonotonic Reasoning, (ed. M. Ginsberg), Morgan Kaufmann, 311–325, 1987.)
  • K. L. Clark, S. Gregory, A relational language for parallel programming, Proc. ACM Conference on Functional Languages and Computer Architecture, ACM, New York, 171–178 pp, 1981. (Also in Concurrent Prolog, (ed. E Shapiro), MIT Press, 9–26 pp, 1987.)
  • K. L. Clark, S-A. Tarnlund (eds), Logic Programming, Academic Press, London, 1982.
  • K. L. Clark, F. G. McCabe, micro-PROLOG: Programming in Logic, Prentice-Hall International, 1984.
  • K. L. Clark, I. Foster, A Declarative Environment for Concurrent Logic Programming, Proceedings of Colloquium on Functional and Logic Programming and Specification, LNCS 250, Springer-Verlag, 212 - 242 pp, 1987
  • K. L. Clark, Logic Programming Schemes and their Implementations, Computational Logic (ed Lassez and Plotkin), MIT Press, 1991.
  • F.G. McCabe, K. L. Clark, April — Agent process interaction language, in Intelligent Agents, (ed N. Jennings, M. Wooldridge), LNAI, Vol. 890, Springer-Verlag, 1995.
  • N. Skarmeas, K. L. Clark, Content based routing as the basis for intra-agent communication, Proceedings of International WS on Agent Theories, Architectures and Languages 98, Intelligent Agents V, (ed. J. P. Muler et al.), Springer-Verlag, LNAI 1555, 1999 (best paper award).
  • K. L. Clark, Logic Programming Languages, Encyclopedia of Computer Science, (eds. A. Ralston, E. Reilly, D. Hemmendinger), pp 1024–1031, Nature Publishing Group, 2000.
  • K. L. Clark and F. McCabe, Go! — A Multi-paradigm Programming Language for Implementing Multi-threaded Agents, Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence, 41(2–4):171–206, August 2004.
  • T. Hong and K. L. Clark, Towards a Universal Web Wrapper, Proceedings of the 17th International FLAIRS Conference, AAAI Press, 2004.
  • K. L. Clark and F. McCabe, Ontology schema for an agent belief store, International Journal of Human-Computer Studies, 65(7), July 2007, Pages 640–658.
  • K. L. Clark, P. Robinson, S. Zappacosta Amboldi, Multi-threaded communicating agents in Qu-Prolog, Computational Logic in Multi-agent systems (ed. F Toni and P. Torroni), LNAI Vol. 3900, pp 186–205, 2006.
  • S. Coffey and K. L. Clark, A Hybrid, Teleo-Reactive Architecture for Robot Control, Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Multi-Agent Robotic Systems (MARS-06), 2006.
  • D. Gaertner, K. L. Clark, M. Sergot, Ballroom etiquette: a case study for norm-governed multi-agent systems, Proceedings of AAMAS06 Workshop on Coordination, Organization, Institutions and Norms in agent systems, LNCS 4386, Springer, 2006.
  • J. Knottenbelt, K. L. Clark, Contract Related Agents, Computational Logic in Multi-agent systems (ed F Toni and P. Torroni), LNAI Vol. 3900, pp 226–242, 2006.
  • J. Ma, A. Russo, K. Broda, K. L. Clark, DARE: A System for Distributed Abductive Reasoning, Autonomous Agents and Multi-agent Systems Journal, 16(3), Springer, June, 2008.
  • P. J. Robinson, K. L. Clark, Pedro: A Publish/Subscribe Server Using Prolog Technology, Software: Practice and Experience, 40(4) pp 313–329, Wiley, 2010.
  • K. L. Clark, P. J. Robinson, Robotic agent programming in TeleoR, Proceedings of International Conference on Robotics and Automation, IEEE, May 2015.
  • K. Clark, B. Hengst, M. Pagnucco, D. Rajaratnam, P. Robinson, C. Sammut, M. Thielscher, A Framework for Integrating Symbolic and Sub-Symbolic Representations, Proceedings of International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence 2016, New York, AAAI Press, July 2016.

References edit

  1. ^ Jean-Louis Lassez; Gordon Plotkin, eds. (1991). Computational Logic — Essays in Honor of Alan Robinson. Cambridge/MA: MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-12156-5.
  2. ^ "Durham University MathSoc". Facebook. 9 December 2015. Retrieved 16 May 2019. Prof Clark graduated from our department in 1964 (Hatfield College), before embarking on a career in artificial intelligence and computational logic
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Keith Clark CV" (PDF). June 2018. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  4. ^ "Predicate logic as a computational formalism". University of London. Retrieved 9 January 2013.
  5. ^ "talks@bham : Rule Control of Goal Directed, Reactive, Communicating Robotic Agents". Birmingham University. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  6. ^ Keith L. Clark at DBLP Bibliography Server  
  7. ^ "Keith Clark's Home Page". Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  8. ^ "Temporal Logic Semantics for Teleo-Reactive Robotic Agent Programs". cse.cuhk.edu.hk. Chinese University of Hong Kong.

External links edit