Also known as William Stephen George Mann
Canadian wearable computing researcher and professor
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Steven Mann (May 2, 1943 – September 9, 2009) was an American songwriter and guitarist. History Mann broke onto the West Coast music scene in the 1960s. As a student at Valley State College in Los Angeles, Mann began to perform folk music at hootenannies and Los Angeles clubs like The Ash Grove and The Troubadour. He made a number of friends on the folk music scene, including Hoyt Axton, Judy Henske, Gail Garnet, Jimmy Rubin, and Terry Wadsworth (who later joined The New Christy Minstrels). <a
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· 2021 · cited 77,608x
· 2015 · cited 73,406x
· 1995 · cited 41,650x
· 2008 · cited 23,131x
· 2008 · cited 14,431x
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Mann, Steve Professor - Electrical & Computer Engineering
ece.utoronto.ca →Steve Mann has been recognized as “the father of wearable computing” (IEEE ISSCC 2000) and “the father of wearable augmented reality (AR)” for his invention of “Digital Eye Glass” (EyeTap) and mediated reality (predecessor of AR). He also invented the Chirplet Transform, Comparametric Equations, and HDR (High Dynamic Range) imaging (U.S. Pat. 5828793). He received his PhD from MIT in 1997, and is a tenured full professor at the University of Toronto. Together with Marvin Minsky, “the father of AI (Artificial Intelligence)”, and Ray Kurzweil, Mann created the new discipline of HI (Humanistic Intelligence). Mann and his students co-founded numerous companies with a worth in excess of $1 billion. He also created the world’s first course on “inventrepreneurship” (invention and entrepreneurship). Mann is also the inventor of the hydraulophone, the world’s first musical instrument to make sound from vibrations in liquids, giving rise to a new theory of reverse kinematics and mechanics based on the time-integral of displacement, for which Mann coined the term “absement”. Mann has authored more than 200 publications, books and patents, and his work and inventions have been shown at the Smithsonian Institute, National Museum of American History, The Science Museum, MoMA, Stedelijk Museum (Amsterdam), and Triennale di Milano. He has been featured in AP News, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Time, Newsweek, Fortune, WiReD, NBC, ABC, CNN, David Letterman, CBC-TV, CBS, Scientific American, Scientific American Frontiers, Discovery Channel, Byte, Reuters, New Scientist, Rolling Stone, and BBC.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).