Understanding the science behind Hinton and Hopfield’s Nobel Prize in physics
British-Canadian computer scientist Geoffrey Hinton and co-laureate John Hopfield are set to receive the Nobel Prize for physics on Tuesday in Stockholm.
The pair landed the accolade because they used physics to develop artificial neural networks, which help computers learn without having to program them.
These networks form the foundation of machine learning, a computer science that relies on data and algorithms to help artificial intelligence mimic the human brain.
Hinton and Hopfield’s path to the Nobel began when Hopfield, who is now a professor emeritus at Princeton University, invented a network in 1982 that could store and reconstruct images in data.