He is also a senior research scientist at the Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition.
He did graduate work in chemical physics and obtained a Ph.D. in History and Philosophy of Science from Indiana University Bloomington in 1969.
[9][10] Glymour, in collaboration with Peter Spirtes and Richard Scheines, also developed an automated causal inference algorithm implemented as software named TETRAD.
[11] Using multivariate statistical data as input, TETRAD rapidly searches from among all possible causal relationship models and returns the most plausible causal models based on conditional dependence relationships between those variables.
The algorithm is based on principles from statistics, graph theory, philosophy of science, and artificial intelligence.