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First Chinese Turing Award Winner Joined
our Department As Distinguished Professor-at-Large
Professor Andrew Chi-chih Yao, world-renowned computer scientist and the
first Chinese scientist to receive the prestigious Turing Award of the
Association for Computing Machinery, the highest honour in computer
science, has joined our Department as Distinguished Professor-at-Large.
The prestigious Turing Award is presented annually by the Association for
Computing Machinery (ACM) to a selected individual whose contributions are
of lasting and major technical importance to the computer field and have
propelled the information technology industry. The award, named after Alan
M. Turing, the British mathematician considered to be one of the fathers
of modern computer science, is regarded as the Nobel Prize of computer
science. As a winner of the Award, Professor Yao's profound contributions
to the advancement of computer science and technology is widely recognized
worldwide.
(
http://www.acm.org/awards/taward.html)
Professor Yao was born in Shanghai, China. He completed his undergraduate
education in physics at Taiwan University and furthered his studies at
Harvard University. After he was awarded a PhD degree in physics from
Harvard University in 1972, he decided to switch to computer science,
foreseeing the unprecedented changes that computer science would bring to
the global community. In 1975, he received his second PhD, in computer
science, from the University of Illinois. After teaching and researching
at MIT (1975-1976), Stanford University (1976-1981, 1982-1986) and UC
Berkeley (1981-1982), he joined Princeton University in 1986 as the
William and Edna Macaleer Professor of Engineering and Applied Science. In
2004, he became a Professor of Computer Science at Tsinghua University in
Beijing.
Professor Yao was awarded the Turing Award in 2000, "in recognition of his
fundamental contributions to the theory of computation, including the
complexity-based theory of pseudorandom number generation, cryptography,
and communication complexity". His research activities are in the design
of efficient computer algorithms, and complexity theories in emerging new
areas of theoretical computer science, such as quantum communication and
computing. A prolific scientist, Professor Yao has published over 100
articles in these areas and brought ground-breaking developments to
computer science.
A world-leading computer scientist, Professor Yao has received numerous
honours and awards. Before the Turing Award, he had won two prestigious
awards: the George Polya Prize and the first Donald E. Knuth Prize. He
received an Honorary Doctor of Science degree from City University of Hong
Kong in 2003, and an Honorary Doctor of Engineering degree from Hong Kong
University of Science and Technology in 2004. Professor Yao is a member of
the US Academy of Sciences, a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences, and a member of Academia Sinica in Taipei. He was recently
elected a foreign fellow of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
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