Amnon Shashua

Israeli computer scientist (born 1960) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Amnon Shashua (Hebrew: אמנון שעשוע; born May 26, 1960) is an Israeli computer scientist, businessman and philanthropist. He is the Sachs Professor of Computer Science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, president and chief executive officer (CEO) of the autonomous driving and driver-assistance technology company Mobileye, Co-founder of the artificial vision devices company OrCam, Founder and owner of ONE ZERO digital bank,[1] chairman of artificial intelligence company AI21 Labs,[2] and co-founder of Mentee Robotics[3] and AAI Technologies.[4]

Born (1960-05-26) May 26, 1960 (age 65)
Ramat Gan, Israel
KnownforCo-founding Mobileye and OrCam, advancements in AI and computer vision, philanthropy through the Shashua Family Foundation
AwardsKaye Innovation Award, Mifal HaPayis Landau Prize, Israeli Independence Day torch lighter, Electronic Imaging Scientist of the Year, Dan David Prize, Mobility Innovator Award, The Automotive Hall of Fame, MotorTrend's Software-Defined Vehicle Innovator Award, Israel Prize
Quick facts Born, Alma mater ...
Amnon Shashua
אמנון שעשוע
Amnon Shashua in 2018
Born (1960-05-26) May 26, 1960 (age 65)
Ramat Gan, Israel
Alma materTel-Aviv University (BS)

Weizmann Institute of Science (MS)

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (PhD)
Known forCo-founding Mobileye and OrCam, advancements in AI and computer vision, philanthropy through the Shashua Family Foundation
AwardsKaye Innovation Award, Mifal HaPayis Landau Prize, Israeli Independence Day torch lighter, Electronic Imaging Scientist of the Year, Dan David Prize, Mobility Innovator Award, The Automotive Hall of Fame, MotorTrend's Software-Defined Vehicle Innovator Award, Israel Prize
Scientific career
FieldsComputer science
Autonomous vehicles
InstitutionsHebrew University of Jerusalem
ThesisGeometry and photometry in 3D visual recognition (1993)
Doctoral advisorShimon Ullman
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Biography

Amnon Shashua was born in Ramat Gan, Israel, to parents of Iraqi origin.[5] From a young age, he was fascinated with computers, a field that was in its early stages of development. He attended the ORT school in Givatayim for his early education in computer engineering.[5]

Amnon Shashua received his B.Sc. in mathematics and computer science from Tel-Aviv University in 1985 and his M.Sc. in computer science in 1989 from the Weizmann Institute of Science[6] under the supervision of Shimon Ullman. His Ph.D. in brain and cognitive sciences was received from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), while working at the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, in 1993; and his postdoctoral training under Tomaso Poggio at the center for biological and computational learning at MIT.

Career

Academic

Shashua has been on the computer science faculty at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem since 1996. In 1999 he was appointed as an associate professor and in 2003 received full professorship. From 2002 to 2005 he was the head of the engineering and computer science school at the Hebrew University.[7] Shashua has held the Sachs chair in computer science at the Hebrew University since 2007.[8]

Shashua's work includes early visual processing of saliency and grouping mechanisms, visual recognition and learning, image synthesis for animation and graphics, theory of computer vision in the areas of multiple-view geometry and multi-view tensors, multilinear algebraic systems in vision and learning, primal/dual optimization for approximate inference in MRF and Graphical models, and (since 2014) deep layered networks.[citation needed]

In 2026 he was elected to the US National Academy of Engineering (NAE) as an international member of its Class of 2026 for his contributions to computer vision and its application to autonomous driving technology.[9]

Business

In 1995, Shashua founded CogniTens, which was sold to Hexagon AB in 2007.[10] In 1999, Shashua co-founded Mobileye, a company that develops systems-on-chip and computer vision algorithms for driving assistance systems, as well as autonomous driving technology.[11][12] On August 1, 2014, Mobileye launched its IPO on the NYSE which was the biggest Israeli IPO ever in the US raising approximately $1 billion at a market cap of $5.3 billion.[13]

In 2010, Shashua co-founded OrCam, an Israeli company which launched an assistive device for the visually impaired based on computer vision capabilities.[14]

In August 2017, Intel acquired Mobileye for approximately $15.3 billion.[15][16] Shashua became a senior vice president at Intel, in addition to his title of President and CEO of Mobileye. In 2017, he also co-founded AI21 Labs.[17] In 2020, he was awarded the Dan David Prize for his work in Artificial Intelligence.[18][19]

In October 2022, Mobileye went public again, trading on the Nasdaq Stock Exchange with Shashua as its CEO.[20][21]

In 2022, he co-founded Mentee Robotics with Prof. Shai Shalev-Shwartz and Prof. Lior Wolf to develop intelligent humanoid robots.[3] In 2023, he was awarded Israel Prize in the category lifetime achievement and exceptional contribution to the nation.[22]

In 2023, he founded AAI Technologies with Prof. Shai Shalev-Shwartz, Dr. Yoav Levine, Dr. Or Sharir, Dr. Noam Weiss, and Dr. Gal Benyamini. The company develops expert-based artificial intelligence (Expert AI) systems.[4][23] In September 2025, the startup was on track to becoming a unicorn.[23][24]

In January 2026, it was announced that Mentee Robotics, co-founded by Shashua, would be sold to Mobileye for $900 million.[25][26]

Philanthropy

Shashua, along with his family, has engaged in various philanthropic activities through the Shashua Family Foundation.[27]

Shashua's wife, Anat Ramaty Shashua, is president of the Foundation as well as chairwoman of the Orr Shalom organization for children and youth at risk.[27] Together, they also founded The Social Solidarity Foundation, a public benefit organization supported by the Shashua Family Foundation, that assists in the development and growth of small businesses in Israel.[28] Their daughter, Inbar Shashua Bar-Nir, serves as chairwoman of the board.[29]

As of 2024, Shashua and his family have donated approximately $60 million to various charitable causes, focusing on promoting economic opportunities and supporting underrepresented populations in Israel. These populations include ultra-Orthodox communities, Israeli-Arabs, women in STEM fields, and peripheral communities.[30]

The Shashua Family Foundation has also funded scholarships at Tel Aviv University (TAU), his alma mater.[30]

In response to the economic challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic, the family established the WE-19 program, a $35 million fund designed to support approximately 2,000 small businesses affected by the pandemic.[30]

Selected publications

  • Shalev-Shwartz, S; Shammah, S; Shashua, A (2016). "Safe, multi-agent, reinforcement learning for autonomous driving". arXiv:1610.03295 [cs.AI].
  • Shalev-Shwartz, S; Shammah, S; Shashua, A (2017). "On a formal model of safe and scalable self-driving cars". arXiv:1708.06374 [cs.RO].
  • Shashua, A; Riklin-Raviv, T (2001). "The quotient image: Class-based re-rendering and recognition with varying illuminations". IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence. 23 (2): 129–139. Bibcode:2001ITPAM..23..129S. doi:10.1109/34.908964.
  • Ullman, S; Sha'ashua, A (1988). "Structural Saliency: The Detection of Globally Salient Structures using a Locally Connected Network". [1988 Proceedings] Second International Conference on Computer Vision. pp. 321–327. doi:10.1109/CCV.1988.590008. hdl:1721.1/6493. ISBN 0-8186-0883-8.
  • Shashua, A; Hazan, T (2005). "Expectation maximization algorithms for conditional likelihoods". Proceedings of the 22nd international conference on Machine learning - ICML '05. pp. 792–799. doi:10.1145/1102351.1102451.
  • Shashua, A; Gdalyahu, Y; Hayun, G (2004). "Pedestrian detection for driving assistance systems: Single-frame classification and system level performance". IEEE Intelligent Vehicles Symposium, 2004. pp. 1–6. doi:10.1109/IVS.2004.1336346. ISBN 0-7803-8310-9.
  • Cohen, N; Sharir, O; Shashua, A (2015). "On the Expressive Power of Deep Learning: A Tensor Analysis". arXiv:1509.05009 [cs.NE].
  • Shashua, A; Levin, A (2002). "Ranking with large margin principle: Two approaches". Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems. 15.
  • Zass, R; Shashua, A (2008). "Probabilistic graph and hypergraph matching". 2008 IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition. pp. 1–8. doi:10.1109/CVPR.2008.4587500. ISBN 978-1-4244-2242-5.
  • Dagan, E; Mano, O; Stein, GP; Shashua, A (2004). "Forward collision warning with a single camera". IEEE Intelligent Vehicles Symposium, 2004. pp. 37–42. doi:10.1109/IVS.2004.1336352. ISBN 0-7803-8310-9.
  • Wolf, L; Shashua, A (2003). "Learning over sets using kernel principal angles". Journal of Machine Learning Research. 4: 913–931.

See also

References

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