Monroe Newborn

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Monty Newborn [1] Monroe M. (Monty) Newborn,

a Canadian computer scientist, and emeritus professor at McGill University [2] in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Monty was early computer chess programmer and primary author of the chess program Ostrich, and the pawn endgame program Peasant [3].

In 1970 Monty Newborn and Ben Mittman initiated, constituted and organized the ACM North American Computer Chess Championship, and together with Ben Mittman and David Levy the World Computer Chess Championship in 1974. Newborn was co-founder of the ICCA in 1977, and served as its president from 1983 until 1986. He has written extensively on computer chess [4].

Biography

Brief Biography of Monty Newborn [12]:

Monty Newborn received his Ph. D. in Electrical Engineering from The [Ohio State University](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohio_State_University) in 1967. He was an assistant professor and then associate professor at [Columbia University](Columbia_University "Columbia University") in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from 1967-1975. In 1975, he joined the School of Computer Science at [McGill University](McGill_University "McGill University") and has been with the School since then, serving as its director from 1976-1983. He has been an [ACM](ACM "ACM") Fellow since 1994.

His research focuses on search problems in artificial intelligence where two areas are of particular interest: chess-playing programs and automated theorem-proving programs. He has published seven books on these subjects and a number of research papers as well. He served as chairman of the ACM Computer Chess Committee from 1981 until 1997. In that capacity he organized the first Kasparov versus Deep Blue match (known as the ACM Chess Challenge) in 1996. The following year he served as head of the officials at the [second Kasparov versus Deep Blue match](Kasparov_versus_Deep_Blue_1997 "Kasparov versus Deep Blue 1997") won by Deep Blue. Through the 1970s and 1980s, his chess program Ostrich competed in five world championships, coming close to winning in 1974.

Quotes

Quote from Canadian Chess [13]

  • Computer Science Professor, McGill University
  • Programmer (originally with George Arnold) of Ostrich (also Ostrich 80, Ostrich 81), a computer chess program which competed in the ACM U.S. Computer Championships (1972-74), ACM North American Computer Championships (1975, 1977-87) and World Computer Championships (1974, 1977, 1980, 1983, 1986)
  • 2nd place ACM U.S. Computer Championship 1973 for Ostrich
  • Organized first ACM U.S. Computer Championship 1970, as well as many succeeding championships
  • President, International Computer Chess Association 1983-86
  • Applied results obtained from research on search algorithms in the field of computer chess to the field of internet searching
  • Canadian Chess Hall of Fame 2001

See also

Selected Publications

1973 …

1975 …

  • Monroe Newborn (1975). Computer Chess. Academic Press, New York, N.Y. ISBN 0-125-17250-8.

Chapter I. Introduction Chapter II. The History and Basic Ideas of Computer Chess Chapter III. The Kotok-McCarthy Chess Program versus the ITEP Chess Program Chapter IV. The Greenblatt Chess Program Chapter V. The First United States Computer Chess Championship Chapter VI. The Second United States Computer Chess Championship Chapter VII. The Third United States Computer Chess Championship Chapter VIII. Kaissa Chapter IX. The Fourth United States Computer Chess Championship Chapter X. Ostrich: A Description of a Chess-Playing Program Appendix I. The First World Computer Chess Championship

1980 …

1985 …

1990 …

1995 …

2000 …

  • Monty Newborn (2000). Automated Theorem Proving: Theory and Practice. Springer, amazon

2005 …

2010 …

2020 …

References

  1. Monty Newborn Professor School of Computer Science, McGill University
  2. Monty Newborn - McGill School of Computer Science
  3. Monroe Newborn (1977). PEASANT: An endgame program for kings and pawns. Chess Skill in Man and Machine (Ed. Peter W. Frey), pp. 119-130
  4. Books by Monroe Newborn from Bookstores.com
  5. Newborn, Matsa, Slate, Atkin, and Mittman at the 1st North American Computer Chess Championship, New York City, New York, Gift of Monroe Newborn from The Computer History Museum
  6. Chess pioneers in Sacher Hotel Vienna, Austria, Gift of Benjamin Mittman, The Computer History Museum
  7. Tony Marsland, Monty Newborn (1981). A brighter future for Soviet computer chess? ICCA Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 1, pdf
  8. Monroe Newborn and Soviet computer chess developers in Moscow, Gift of Monroe Newborn, 1980
  9. Computer chess pioneer Mikhail Donskoy passes on from ChessBase News, January 16, 2009
  10. Kaissa & Botvinik by Shay Bushinsky, rgcc, October 16, 1997
  11. Photo Gift of Monroe Newborn from The Computer History Museum
  12. Monty Newborn, Professor School of Computer Science, McGill University
  13. Canadian Chess - Monroe (Monty) Newborn
  14. New CC book: Beyond Deep Blue by Steven Edwards, CCC, November 11, 2011

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