John K. Kruschke

John K. Kruschke is an American psychologist and statistician known for his work in Connectionism[1] and Bayesian analysis.[2] He is Provost Professor[3] in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences at Indiana University Bloomington, and won the Troland Research Award from the National Academy of Sciences in 2002.[4]

John K. Kruschke
Alma materUniversity of California at Berkeley
Known for
Scientific career
Fields
InstitutionsIndiana University Bloomington
ThesisA connectionist model of category learning (1990)
Websitejkkweb.sitehost.iu.edu

References

  1. Kruschke, John K. (1992). "ALCOVE: An exemplar-based connectionist model of category learning". Psychological Review. 99 (1): 22--44. doi:10.1037/0033-295X.99.1.22.
  2. Kruschke, John K. (2015). Doing Bayesian Data Analysis: A tutorial with R, JAGS, and Stan (2nd ed.). Academic Press. ISBN 9780124058880.
  3. Hinnefeld, Steve (2018-03-19). "IU Bloomington announces Sonneborn Award recipient, Provost Professors". News at IU. Retrieved 2021-10-01.
  4. "Troland Research Awards". National Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 22 January 2022.


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