Yoshua Bengio
Yoshua Bengio | |
|---|---|
Bengio at ICLR 2025 | |
| Born | March 5, 1964 Paris, France |
| Citizenship | Canada |
| Education | McGill University (BS, MS, PhD) |
| Known for | |
| Relatives | Samy Bengio (brother) |
| Awards | Marie-Victorin Prize (2017) Turing Award (2018) AAAI Fellow (2019) Legion of Honor (2022) VinFuture Prize (2024) Honorary Doctorate (2025) |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Machine learning Deep learning Artificial intelligence |
| Institutions | Université de Montréal MILA Element AI |
| Thesis | Artificial Neural Networks and their Application to Sequence Recognition (1991) |
| Doctoral advisor | Renato De Mori |
| Notable students | Ian Goodfellow |
| Website | yoshuabengio |
Yoshua Bengio OC OQ OBE FRS FRSC (born March 5, 1964) is a Canadian computer scientist, and a pioneer of artificial neural networks and deep learning. He is a professor at the Université de Montréal and co-president and scientific director of the nonprofit LawZero. He founded Mila, the Quebec Artificial Intelligence (AI) Institute, and was its scientific director until 2025.
Bengio received the 2018 ACM A.M. Turing Award, often referred to as the "Nobel Prize of Computing", together with Geoffrey Hinton and Yann LeCun, for their foundational work on deep learning. Bengio, Hinton, and LeCun are sometimes referred to as the "Godfathers of AI". Bengio is the most-cited computer scientist globally (by both total citations and by h-index), and the most-cited living scientist across all fields (by total citations). In November 2025, Bengio became the first AI researcher with more than a million Google Scholar citations. In 2024, TIME Magazine included Bengio in its yearly list of the world's 100 most influential people.