Andrzej Ehrenfeucht

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Andrzej Ehrenfeucht
Born (1932-08-08) August 8, 1932 (age 91)
University of Colorado at Boulder
Doctoral advisorAndrzej Mostowski
Doctoral studentsDavid Haussler
Eugene Myers

Andrzej Ehrenfeucht (Polish:

Polish-American mathematician and computer scientist
.

Life

Andrzej Ehrenfeucht formulated the

back-and-forth method given in Roland Fraïssé's PhD thesis. Also named for Ehrenfeucht is the Ehrenfeucht–Mycielski sequence
.

In 1971 Ehrenfeucht was a founding member of the Department of Computer Science at the

University of Colorado at Boulder
. He currently teaches and does research at the University, where he runs a project, "breaking away", with Patricia Baggett; the project, using hands-on activities, aims at raising high-school students' interest in mathematics and technology.

Two of Ehrenfeucht's students, Eugene Myers and David Haussler, contributed to the sequencing of the human genome. They, with Harold Gabow, Ross McConnell, and Grzegorz Rozenberg, spoke at a 2012 University of Colorado two-day symposium honoring Ehrenfeucht's 80th birthday.[1]

Two journal issues have come out in his honor, one at his 65th birthday in Lecture Notes in Computer Science,[2] and one at his 80th in Theoretical Computer Science.[3]

Private life

Ehrenfeucht married Alfred Tarski's daughter Ina Tarski.[4]

Bibliography

Books

  • Andrzej Ehrenfeucht, Tero Harju, Ion Petre, David M. Prescott, Grzegorz Rozenberg, Computation in Living Cells: Gene Assembly in Ciliates, Springer, 2004,
  • Patricia Baggett, Andrzej Ehrenfeucht, Breaking Away from the Math Book: Creative Projects for Grades K-6,
  • Andrzej Ehrenfeucht, Tero Harju, Grzegorz Rozenberg, The Theory of 2-Structures: A Framework for Decomposition and Transformation of Graphs, World Scientific, 1999,

Papers

(accessible through Wirtualna Biblioteka Nauki)

See also

References

External links