SCS DISTINGUISHED LECTURE SERIES
3:15 PM - Wean Hall 7500
3:00 PM Distinguished Donuts - Outside the Hall
Gaschnig/Oakley Memorial Lecture

Bernard Chazelle
Eugene Higgins Professor of Computer Science Princeton University
The Algorithmic AgeWhat do migrating geese, flocking cranes, bait balls of fish,
and social networks have in common? All of them are
instances of "natural algorithms," that is, algorithms designed
by nature through evolution over millions of years.
Unlike the human-manufactured variety, natural algorithms are engineered
for survival and reproduction rather than speed and efficiency. Their formidable expressive power is likely to usher in a new "Algorithmic Age"
for natural and social sciences. In this talk, I will argue that for
computer science to play more than a supporting role in this development it will
need to shift its focus on algorithms as problem-solvers and integrate them into a new scientific language.
Speaker Bio: Bernard Chazelle is Eugene Higgins professor of computer science
at Princeton University, where he has been on the faculty
since 1986. He has held research and faculty positions
at Carnegie-Mellon University, Brown University,
Ecole Polytechnique, Ecole Normale Superieure, University
of Paris, INRIA, Xerox Parc, DEC SRC, and NEC Research, where
he was a Fellow. He received his Ph.D in computer science from Yale
University in 1980. He is the author of the book The Discrepancy Method.
His honors include: Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences;
Member, European Academy of Sciences;
Fellow, World Innovation Foundation;
ACM Fellow; Guggenheim Fellow (1994).
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