Marie-Odile Cordier

Marie-Odile Cordier (born 1950) is a retired French computer scientist specializing in artificial intelligence, and in particular in the diagnosis of discrete event dynamic systems. Before retiring, she was a professor at the University of Rennes 1, where she headed the DREAM team, a project for diagnosis, reasoning, and modeling of discrete event systems at the Research Institute of Computer Science and Random Systems (IRISA).[1]

Education and career

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Cordier is originally from Paris, where she was born in 1950.[1] She studied computer science at Paris-Sud University, earning a doctorat de troisième cycle in 1979 under the direction of Jacques Pitrat and a doctorat d'état in 1986 under the direction of Daniel Kayser.[2][3] She completed a habilitation at Paris-Sud University in 1996.[1]

After working as an associate professor at Paris-Sud University, she moved to the University of Rennes as a full professor in 1988.[1] Her doctoral students at Rennes have included Sylvie Thiébaux and Marie-Christine Rousset.[2][3]

Recognition

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Cordier was named as a fellow of the European Association for Artificial Intelligence (formerly ECCAI) in 2001.[1][4] She was the 2015 recipient of the lifetime achievement award of the International Workshop on Principles of Diagnosis (DX).[5]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "Marie-Odile Cordier", IEEE Xplore, IEEE, 20 September 2004, retrieved 2023-01-06
  2. ^ a b Marie-Odile Cordier at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. ^ a b "Marie-Odile Cordier", Theses.fr, retrieved 2023-01-06
  4. ^ EurAI Fellows, European Association for Artificial Intelligence, retrieved 2024-01-06
  5. ^ "Awards", 26th International Workshop on Principles of Diagnosis (DX), CNRS Centre Pour la Communication Scientifique Directe, retrieved 2024-01-06
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