A very brief, very general bio...
Larry Yaeger has used computers to solve a wide variety of problems throughout his
career. Having studied Aerospace Engineering, with a focus on computers, he
carried out pioneering computational fluid dynamic flow studies over the space
shuttle and submarines. As Director of Software Development at Digital
Productions, he used a Cray X-MP supercomputer to generate the computer graphic
special effects for Hollywood films The Last Starfighter, 2010,
and Labyrinth, as well a number of Clio Award-winning television
commercials. While with Alan Kay's Vivarium Program
at Apple Computer, he designed and programmed a computer
"voice" for Koko the gorilla, helped introduce Macintoshes into
routine production on Star Trek: The Next Generation, and created a
widely respected Artificial Life computational ecology
("Polyworld") that evolves neural
architectures resulting from the mutation and recombination of genetic codes,
via behavior-based, sexual reproduction of artificial organisms. He also
co-authored possibly the first book+CD-ROM title, the award-winning Visualization of Natural Phenomena. Also at Apple, in
the Advanced Technology Group, he was Technical Lead in the development of the
neural network-based hand-print recognition system, the
world's first genuinely usable hadwriting recognition system, showcased in
second generation Newton PDAs and Mac OS X's "Inkwell". After a
number of years using Polyworld to study the
evolution of neural complexity and teaching Artificial Life as an
approach to Artificial Intelligence and introductory computer programming
at Indiana University, he reentered industry to write software and create
innovative data optimization algorithms for machine learning at Google, in Mountain View, CA. He is now retired and living back in Bloomington, Indiana.