Joseph Traub, a leading figure in developing the field of computational complexity, passed away Monday morning, August 24, in Santa Fe.
At the time of his passing Traub, 83, was the Edwin Howard Armstrong Professor of Computer Science at Columbia University and an external professor of the Santa Fe Institute.
"Joe was a prodigious and wide-ranging thinker, a pioneer in computer science, an institution and department builder, and a scholar joyfully capable of living in many intellectual worlds at once," says SFI President David Krakauer. "He brought to every problem a rigorous and open-minded balance of insight, an eye for specificity, and a willingness to explore unchartered landscapes of the mind – always with an aesthetic sensitivity. Many of us at SFI have counted on Joe for advice and friendship. We shall miss him very much."
Traub spent his career at the frontiers of applied mathematics and computer science. He was known for advances in algorithmic thinking matched with emerging computational methods during the latter field’s formative period.
From Santa Fe Institute
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