Mary-Anne Williams
Mary-Anne Williams in 2018
Born
Alma materUniversity of Sydney; Stanford University; University of Oxford; Harvard University; University of Edinburgh
AwardsAAAI Fellow Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence; ATSE Fellow Australian Academy of Technological Science and Engineering; ACS Fellow Australian Computer Association; Australasian Artificial Intelligence Distinguished Research Contribution Award 2019; Google Faculty Award 2019-2020 and 2021-2022; Pauli Fellowship 2008; IBM Faculty Award 2007; #16 on 365 Women in STEM; Australasian Distinguished Doctoral Dissertation Award 1995.
Scientific career
FieldsInnovation, Artificial Intelligence, Human-AI Collaboration, Explainable AI (XAI), Strategic Management, Business AI, Social Robotics, Legal and Ethical Implications of AI
InstitutionsUNSW Sydney and Stanford University
Doctoral advisorNorman Foo at the University of Sydney

Mary-Anne Williams FTSE is the Michael J Crouch Chair for Innovation at the University of New South Wales in Sydney Australia (UNSW) based in the UNSW Business School.

She is founder and director of the UNSW Business AI Lab[1] and deputy director of the UNSW AI Institute.[2]

Previously Mary-Anne was a Distinguished Research Professor at University of Technology Sydney and Director of the UTS Magic Lab.[3] At UNSW Professor Williams works with staff, students, alumni and the broader innovation community to grow innovation and entrepreneurship across the University and accelerate innovative thinking in Australia.

Professor Williams is a Data Scientist and Behavioural Designer with expertise in Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive Science, Disruptive Technologies, Digital Transformation, Business and Law. She is listed among Robohub's "Top 25 Women in Robotics",[4][5] and celebrated on the First International Day of Women and Girls in Science.[6]

Professor Williams is a Fellow of AAAI (the peak global body for Artificial Intelligence), a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering (ATSE), a Fellow of the Australian Computer Society (FACS), Fellow at CODEX at Stanford University.[7] She has served on numerous boards and advisory groups including KR Inc, the Innovation Reference Group with the South Western Sydney Local Area Health District, the Digital Transformation and the AI Preparedness Committees at ATSE, the ACM Eugene L. Lawler Award for Humanitarian Contributions within Computer Science and Informatics.

Professor Williams has been a speaker at major events including the 2022 APAC Open Data Science Conference, 2021 ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human–Robot Interaction, 2020 Strategic Management Society Conference on Designing the Future at Berkeley, 2019 Academy of Marketing Science,[8] United Nations WSIS Forum on the Impact of AI, 2016 World Science Festival, and Australian Strategic Policy Institute. She shared her views on the impact of AI on Human Rights during a panel at the [9] Australian Human Rights Commission Technology Conference.

Williams focuses on Innovation and works on AI, Decision Making Models, Human-AI Collaboration, and Law. She leads a partnership with the South Western Sydney Local Health District,[10] the Softbank Social Robotics Partnership and the partnership with the Commonwealth Bank in Social Robotics.[11] She discussed the impact of Artificial Intelligence on compassion and human rights with the Dalai Lama in Sydney in June 2018,.[12]

Williams has a PhD in Computer Science and a Master of Laws. She is co-founder of the AI Policy Hub.[13] From 2003–2020 Professor Williams led the UTS RoboCup Team to become World Champions in Social Robotics 2019–2022. The team was the Australian Champion and Top International team in 2004. It won the Human–Robot Interface Award in 2017. In 2018 the RoboCup Team won the Tour Guide Challenge with the highest score of any team on any test in the history of the Social Robotics League.[14] In 2019 her Research Team won the Social Robotics League at RoboCup 2019. It was noted in 2020 that the team had more female representation that all the other teams in the Social Robotics league combined highlighting the breadth of her impact in robotics and her commitment to developing a new generation of leaders.

Williams is known for her foundational contributions to the field of Decision Making using insights, methods and techniques from belief revision.[15] Belief Revision is a fundamental area in Artificial Intelligence. It provides representations, models and mechanisms for computers to develop a set of beliefs and to revise them over time as they receive new information. Belief revision plays a critical role in Explainable Artificial Intelligence. It allows AI systems to generate explanations of their behaviour that help humans interpret, understand, predict, and importantly trust AI systems.

Over the last three decades Professor Williams has provided solutions to several open research problems in decision making related to finite representations of beliefs, the iteration of belief revision mechanisms, and the relevance of changes and explanations. She developed the first computational models and anytime algorithms for Belief Revision Operators to be applied to real-world problems.[16][17] Anytime algorithms have a critically important feature for real-world applications, the more time they have the better there outcomes. Not all algorithms have this feature. For example, venturing down fruitless decision/search tree branches usually means backtracking to a weaker outcome.

Publications

See also

References

  1. "UNSW Business AI Lab".
  2. "UNSW AI Institute". unsw.edu.au. Retrieved 20 November 2022.
  3. "Professor Wozniak takes on a new role at Australian university". cnet.com. 20 October 2014. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  4. RoboHub Top 25 Women in Robotics 2013, robohub.org
  5. "Six Impressive Australian Women Scientists", 11 February 2016, sbs.com.au
  6. "International Day of Women and Girls in Science 2016", un.org
  7. "Mary Anne Williams". Stanford.edu. Retrieved 18 November 2022.
  8. "Speaker on Artificial Intelligence and Social Robotics". worldsciencefestival.com. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  9. Australian Human Rights Commission Technology Conference
  10. "Mary Anne Williams". which-50.com. Retrieved 16 March 2020.
  11. "Mary Anne Williams". cba.com.au. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  12. "AI Law, Ethics and Policy". Happiness and Its Causes. Retrieved 1 August 2018.
  13. "AI Policy Hub". AI Policy Hub. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  14. "UTS RoboCup 2018". UTS. 2 July 2018. Retrieved 1 August 2018.
  15. On the Logic of Theory Base Change Proceeding JELIA '94 Proceedings of the European Conference on Logics in Artificial Intelligence Pages 86-105. Jelia '94. ACM Digital Library. 1994. pp. 86–105. ISBN 9783540583325. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  16. Williams, Mary-Anne; Sims, Aidan (2000). "SATEN: An Object-Oriented Web-Based Revision and Extraction Engine". arXiv:cs/0003059.
  17. "Social Robotics Applications". CBA. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
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