The people actively involved in research in theoretical computer science.
Subcategories 5
Related categories 2
Sites 17
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- Ronald L. Rivest Andrew and Erna Viterbi Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science in MIT's EECS Dept and member of Theory of Computation Group at CSAIL.
- Rajeev Motwani Professor and Director of Graduate Studies, Computer Science Department, Stanford University.
- Christos H. Papadimitriou Professor in CS Dept, UCB.
- Giorgi Japaridze Associate Professor in Department of Computing Sciences, Villanova University, Pennsylvania.
- Daniel A. Spielman Professor of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science at Yale.
- Alex Lopez-Ortiz Professor, School of Computer Science, Faculty of Mathematics, University of Waterloo.
- Madhu Sudan Faculty at EECS Department, MIT and member of Theory of Computing group in CSAIL.
- Albert R. Meyer Hitachi America Professor of Engineering, EECS Dept, MIT and member of Theory of Computation Group at CSAIL.
- David R. Karger Faculty at EECS Dept, MIT and member of CSAIL.
- Tom Leighton Professor of Applied Mathematics at MIT and member of the Theory of Computation group at CSAIL.
- Bernard Jacquemin's NLP page Research interests in natural language processing, lexical semantics using both symbolic and statistical analysis methods for parsing and word sense disambiguation, sense representation and rephrasing
- Murdoch James Gabbay Researcher in theoretical computer science. Home site with academic resources (academic papers and talks), opinions, and personal information.
- Saugata Basu Professor in Department of Mathematics at Purdue University.
- Adam D. Smith Assistant Professor at PSU. Provides details of teaching and research.
- Karl-Heinz Pennemann Researcher in theoretical computer science, specifically in the area verification of graph-based specifications. Website provides academic papers and personal information.
- Simon Perdrix Postdoc at the Laboratory for Foundation of Computer Science (LFCS). Research in models of quantum computation, high level methods for quantum computing and state transfer.
- John Mitchell Professor in Computer Science Department at Stanford University