Michael L. Littman

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Michael Lederman Littman, an American mathematician, computer scientist and professor of CS at Brown University, and before at Rutgers University and Duke University. He received his Ph.D. in 1996 at Brown University on Algorithms for Sequential Decision Making under advisor Leslie P. Kaelbling. His research interests focus on stochastic games and reinforcement learning along with the related Markov Models for decision making, such as Markov Chain, Hidden Markov Model (HMM), Markov Decision Process (MDP), and Partially Observable Markov Decision Process (POMDP).

=Crossword Solver= During his time at Duke University in the late 90s, Michael L. Littman worked on an automated crossword solver Proverb, which won an Outstanding Paper Award in 1999 from AAAI  and competed in the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament.

=See also= =Markov Models= Michael Littman's explanatory grid on Markov Models :
 * Dr.Fill by Matthew L. Ginsberg

=Selected Publications=

1990 ...

 * Justin A. Boyan, Michael L. Littman (1993). Packet Routing in Dynamically Changing Networks: A Reinforcement Learning Approach. NIPS 1993, pdf
 * Michael L. Littman (1994). Markov Games as a Framework for Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning. International Conference on Machine Learning, pdf
 * Michael L. Littman (1996). Algorithms for Sequential Decision Making . Ph.D. thesis, Brown University, pdf
 * Leslie Pack Kaelbling, Michael L. Littman, Andrew W. Moore (1996). Reinforcement Learning: A Survey. JAIR, Vol. 4, pdf
 * Michael L. Littman (1997). Probabilistic Propositional Planning: Representations and Complexity. AAAI/IAAI 1997
 * Michael L. Littman, Judy Goldsmith, Martin Mundhenk (1998). The Computational Complexity of Probabilistic Planning. JAIR, Vol. 9, pdf
 * Michael L. Littman (1999). Initial Experiments in Stochastic Satisfiability. AAAI/IAAI 1999
 * Michael L. Littman, Greg A. Keim, Noam M. Shazeer (1999). Solving Crosswords with PROVERB. AAAI/IAAI 1999
 * Noam M. Shazeer, Michael L. Littman, Greg A. Keim (1999). Solving Crossword Puzzles as Probabilistic Constraint Satisfaction. AAAI/IAAI 1999, CiteSeerX
 * Greg A. Keim, Noam M. Shazeer, Michael L. Littman, Sushant Agarwal, Catherine M. Cheves, Joseph Fitzgerald, Jason Grosland, Fan Jiang, Shannon Pollard, Karl Weinmeister (1999). PROVERB: The Probabilistic Cruciverbalist. AAAI/IAAI 1999, pdf

2000 ...

 * Sebastian Thrun, Michael L. Littman (2000). A Review of Reinforcement Learning. AI Magazine, Vol. 21, No. 1, pdf
 * Michael L. Littman (2000). Review: Computer Language Games. CG 2000
 * Jiefu Shi, Michael L. Littman (2000). Abstraction Methods for Game Theoretic Poker. CG 2000
 * Michael L. Littman, Richard Sutton, Satinder Singh (2001). Predictive Representations of State. NIPS 2001, pdf
 * Michael L. Littman (2001). Value-function reinforcement learning in Markov games. Cognitive Systems Research, Vol. 2, pdf
 * Michael L. Littman, Greg A. Keim, Noam M. Shazeer (2002). A probabilistic approach to solving crossword puzzles. Artificial Intelligence, Vol. 134, pdf
 * Peter Stone, Robert Schapire, Michael L. Littman, János A. Csirik, David McAllester (2003). Decision-Theoretic Bidding Based on Learned Density Models in Simultaneous, Interacting Auctions. JAIR, Vol. 19, pdf
 * Michael L. Littman (2008). Autonomous Model Learning for Reinforcement Learning. QEST 2008

2010 ...

 * Thomas J. Walsh, Sergiu Goschin, Michael L. Littman (2010). Integrating sample-based planning and model-based reinforcement learning. AAAI, pdf » MCTS, UCT, Reinforcement Learning
 * Michael L. Littman (2012). Technical Perspective: A New Way to Search Game Trees. Communications of the ACM, Vol. 55, No. 3
 * Michael Kearns, Michael L. Littman, Satinder Singh (2013). Graphical Models for Game Theory. CoRR, January 2013, pdf
 * Anthony R. Cassandra, Michael L. Littman, Nevin L. Zhang (2013). Incremental Pruning: A Simple, Fast, Exact Method for Partially Observable Markov Decision Processes. CoRR, February 2013, pdf
 * Ari Weinstein, Michael L. Littman, Sergiu Goschin (2013). Rollout-based Game-tree Search Outprunes Traditional Alpha-beta. PMLR, Vol. 24 » MCTS, UCT

=External Links=
 * Michael Littman's Home Page
 * Michael L. Littman from Wikipedia
 * The Mathematics Genealogy Project - Michael Littman

=References=

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