Georgy Maximovich Adelson-Velsky (; name is sometimes transliterated as Georgii Adelson-Velskii) (8 January 1922 – 26 April 2014) was a Soviet mathematician and computer scientist.

Born in Samara, Adelson-Velsky was originally educated as a pure mathematician. His first paper, with his fellow student and eventual long-term collaborator Alexander Kronrod in 1945, won a prize from the Moscow Mathematical Society. He and Kronrod were the last students of Nikolai Luzin, and he earned his doctorate in 1949 under the supervision of Israel Gelfand.

He began working in artificial intelligence and other applied topics in the late 1950s.

Beginning in 1963, Adelson-Velsky headed the development of a computer chess program at the Institute for Theoretical and Experimental Physics in Moscow. His innovations included the first use of bitboards (a now-common method for representing game positions) in computer chess. The program defeated Kotok-McCarthy in the first chess match between computer programs, also in 1966,

In August 1992, Adelson-Velsky moved to Israel, and he resided in Ashdod.

Selected publications

  • .
  • .
  • . Translated as "Programming a computer to play chess", Russian Mathematical Surveys 25: 221–262, 1970,

References

  • <p>Near the end of the program, Mikhail Donskoy recounts a trip with Adelson to the University of Waterloo.</p>
  • [http://chessprogramming.wikispaces.com/Georgy+Adelson-Velsky] from http://chessprogramming.wikispaces.com
  • 1990 Moscow Interview with Adelson-Velsky, Eugene Dynkin Collection of Mathematics Interviews, Cornell University Library (in Russian, English transcript).
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20060129190849/http://www.adelson.ru/index.html] (In Russian, List of publication translated into English).
  • Author profile in the database zbMATH