
The Dartmouth Summer Research Conference on Artificial Intelligence was the name of a conference now considered the seminal event for artificial intelligence as a field. The conference occurred in 1956. It was organised by John McCarthy (then at Dartmouth College) and formally proposed by McCarthy, Marvin Minsky, Nathaniel Rochester and Claude Shannon. Their proposal is credited with introducing the term 'artificial intelligence'.
The conference lasted a month, and it was essentially an extended brainstorming session.
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The proposal introduction states
(McCarthy et al 1955)
The proposal goes on to discuss computers, natural language processing, neural networks, theory of computation, abstraction and creativity -- all still open research areas.
According to Stottler-Henke, besides the proposal's authors, attendees included Ray Solomonoff, Oliver Selfridge, Trenchard More, Arthur Samuel, Herbert Simon, and Allen Newell.
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