acm-header
Sign In

Communications of the ACM

ACM News

Pioneers Linking Math and Computer Science Win the Abel Prize


View as: Print Mobile App Share:
2021 Abel Prize winners Avi Wigderson in New Jersey in 2021 and Lszl Lovsz at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 2019.

Avi Wigderson and Lszl Lovsz have been awarded the Abel Prize, an honor given out by the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters and regarded as one of the highest honors in mathematics.

Credit: Dan Komoda/Institute for Advanced Study; Lszl Mudra/Hungarian Academy of Sciences,

When Avi Wigderson and László Lovász began their careers in the 1970s, theoretical computer science and pure mathematics were almost entirely separate disciplines. Today, they've grown so close it's hard to find the line between them. For their many fundamental contributions to both fields, and for their work drawing them together, today Lovász and Wigderson were awarded the Abel Prize, an honor given out by the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters and regarded as one of the highest honors in mathematics.

"In many ways their work is complementary. Avi is on the computer science side and Lovász is on the mathematics side, but a lot of the issues they work on are related," said Russell Impagliazzo, a computer scientist at the University of California, San Diego who has collaborated with both researchers.

 

From Quanta Magazine


View Full Article

 


 

No entries found

Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account