In 1971, Wilensky received his bachelor's degree in mathematics from Yale University, and in 1978, a Ph.D. in computer science from the same institution. After finishing his thesis, "Understanding Goal-Based Stories",[2] Wilensky joined the faculty from the EECS Department of UC Berkeley.[3] In 1986, he worked as the doctoral advisor of Peter Norvig, who then later published the standard textbook of the field: Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach.
He retired from faculty in 2007 and died on Friday, March 15, 2013, of a bacterial infection at the Alta Bates Summit Medical Center.[5] Wilensky was married to Ann Danforth and he is survived by her and their two children, Avi and Eli Wilensky
Research
Throughout his career, Wilensky authored and co-authored over 60 scholarly articles and technical reports on AI, natural language processing, and information dissemination. In addition to his numerous technical publications, Wilensky also published two books on the programming language LISP, LISPcraft and Common LISPcraft, and had almost completed another book manuscript when he suffered a cardiac arrest and stopped writing.
Among his publications are:
R. Wilensky, (1986-09-17). Common LISPcraft. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN9780393955446.[6]
T. A. Phelps and R. Wilensky, "Toward active, extensible, networked documents: Multivalent architecture and applications," in Proc. 1st ACM Intl. Conf. on Digital Libraries, E. A. Fox and G. Marchionini, Eds., New York, NY: ACM Press, 1996, pp. 100–108.[7]
J. Traupman and R. Wilensky, "Experiments in Improving Unsupervised Word Sense Disambiguation," University of California, Berkeley, Department of EECS, Computer Science Division, Tech. Rep. 03–1227, Feb. 2003.[8]
R. Wilensky, Planning and Understanding: A Computational Approach to Human Reasoning, Advanced Book Program, Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley Publishing Co., 1983.[9]
R. Wilensky, "Understanding Goal-Based Stories," Yale University, Sep. 1978.[2]
B. Kahn and R. Wilensky, "A Framework for Distributed Digital Object Services", May 1995. [10]
^Phelps, Thomas A.; Wilensky, Robert (1996-01-01). "Toward active, extensible, networked documents". Proceedings of the first ACM international conference on Digital libraries - DL '96. New York, NY, USA: ACM. pp. 100–108. doi:10.1145/226931.226951. ISBN978-0897918305. S2CID124311.
^Russell, Daniel M. (1984-07-01). "Planning and understanding: A computational approach to human reasoning". Artificial Intelligence. 23 (2): 239–242. doi:10.1016/0004-3702(84)90011-0.