Jeffrey Adgate "Jeff" Dean (born July 23, 1968) is an American computer scientist and software engineer. Since 2018, he has been the lead of Google AI.[1] He was appointed Alphabet's chief scientist in 2023 after a reorganization of Alphabet's AI focused groups.[2]
Before joining Google, Dean worked at DEC/Compaq's Western Research Laboratory,[7] where he worked on profiling tools, microprocessor architecture and information retrieval.[8] Much of his work was completed in close collaboration with Sanjay Ghemawat.[9][4]
Dean joined Google in mid-1999, and was appointed the head of its Artificial Intelligence division in April 2018.[10] While at Google, he designed and implemented large portions of the company's advertising, crawling, indexing and query serving systems, along with various pieces of the distributed computing infrastructure that underlies most of Google's products.[4] At various times, he has also worked on improving search quality, statistical machine translation and internal software development tools and has had significant involvement in the engineering hiring process.
The projects Dean has worked on include:
Original design of Protocol Buffers, an open-source data interchange format.
Spanner, a scalable, multi-version, globally distributed, and synchronously replicated database
Some of the production system design and statistical machine translation system for Google Translate
Bigtable, a large-scale semi-structured storage system[4]
MapReduce, a system for large-scale data processing applications[4]
DistBelief, a proprietary machine-learning system for deep neural networks that was eventually refactored into TensorFlow
TensorFlow, an open-source machine-learning software library[4]
He was an early member of Google Brain,[4] a team that studies large-scale artificial neural networks, and he has headed artificial intelligence efforts since they were split from Google Search.[11]
Dean was the subject of controversy when the ethics in AI researcher, Timnit Gebru, challenged Google's research review process, ultimately leading to her departure from the company. Dean responded by publishing a letter on Google's approach to the research process[12] that was the subject of further criticism and controversy.[13]
Dean was interviewed for the 2018 book Architects of Intelligence: The Truth About AI from the People Building it by the American futurist Martin Ford.[18]
Fay Chang, Jeff Dean, Sanjay Ghemawat, Wilson C. Hsieh, Deborah A. Wallach, Mike Burrows, Tushar Chandra, Andrew Fikes, and Robert E. Gruber. 2006. Bigtable: A Distributed Storage System for Structured Data. OSDI'06: 7th Symposium on Operating System Design and Implementation (October 2006)