American computer scientist
Joan Feigenbaum
Born 1958 (age 66–67) Education Harvard University Occupation American theoretical computer scientist Partner Jeffrey Nussbaum Children 1
Joan Feigenbaum (born 1958 in Brooklyn , New York ) is a theoretical computer scientist with a background in mathematics . She is the Grace Murray Hopper Professor of Computer Science at Yale University .[ 1] At Yale she also holds a courtesy appointment in the Department of Economics. Feigenbaum co-invented the computer-security research area of trust management .[ 2]
Education and career
Feigenbaum did her undergraduate work in Mathematics at Harvard University . She became interested in computers during the Summer Research Program at AT&T's Bell Labs between her junior and senior years. She then earned a Ph.D. in computer science at Stanford University , under the supervision of Andrew Yao ,[ 3] while working summers at Bell Labs . After graduation she joined Bell Labs . She became the Hopper Professor at Yale in 2008.[ 1]
Family
She is married to Jeffrey Nussbaum. They have a son, Sam Baum. Baum was chosen as the child's surname as the greatest common suffix of Feigenbaum and Nussbaum.[ 4]
Awards and honors
In 1998 Feigenbaum was an Invited Speaker of the International Congress of Mathematicians in Berlin.[ 5] In 2001 she became a fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery for her "foundational and highly influential contributions to cryptographic complexity theory, authorization and trust management, massive-data-stream computation, and algorithmic mechanism design."[ 6] In 2012 she was named a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science [ 7] and, in 2013, a member[ 8] of the Connecticut Academy of Science and Engineering . The Connecticut Technology Council chose her as a Woman of Innovation in 2012. She acts as one of the three award-committee members on ACM SIGecom test of time award.[ 9]
References
^ a b "Joan Feigenbaum Named the Grace Murray Hopper Professor" , Yale News , July 18, 2008
^ Joan Feigenbaum bio
^ Joan Feigenbaum at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
^ Notable Women in Mathematics, a Biographical Dictionary , edited by Charlene Morrow and Teri Perl, Greenwood Press, 1998. p 50.
^ Feigenbaum, Joan (1998). "Games, complexity classes, and approximation algorithms" . Doc. Math. (Bielefeld) Extra Vol. ICM Berlin, 1998, vol. III . pp. 429– 439.
^ ACM Fellows: Joan Feigenbaum , Association for Computing Machinery , retrieved 2012-12-29 .
^ "AAAS Members Elected as Fellows", Science , 338 : 1168– 1171, November 30, 2012, doi :10.1126/science.338.6111.1166
^ "Connecticut Academy of Science & Engineering" . Member public profile . Retrieved 2022-11-29 .
^ "ACM SIGecom: Test of Time Award" . www.sigecom.org .
International National Academics People Other