Joseph S. B. Mitchell

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Joseph S. B. Mitchell
JoeMitchell.jpg
Joe Mitchell at SoCG 2011
Residence United States
Fields Theoretical Computer Science
Computational Geometry
Applied Mathematics
Operations Research
Institutions Stony Brook University
Cornell University
Alma mater Carnegie Mellon University
Stanford University
Doctoral advisor Christos Papadimitriou
Known for Computational geometry
Notable awards Gödel Prize (2010)

Joseph S. B. Mitchell is an American computer scientist and mathematician. He is Professor of Applied Mathematics and Statistics and Research Professor of Computer Science at Stony Brook University.

Biography

Mitchell received a BS (1981, Physics and Applied Mathematics), and an MS (1981, Mathematics) from Carnegie Mellon University, and Ph.D. (1986, Operations Research) from Stanford University (under advisorship of Christos Papadimitriou).[1] He was with Hughes Research Laboratories (1981–86) and then on the faculty of Cornell University (1986–1991). He now serves as Distinguished Professor of Applied Mathematics and Statistics and Research Professor of Computer Science at Stony Brook University. He serves as Chair of the Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics (since 2014).

Mitchell has served for several years on the Computational Geometry Steering Committee,[2] often as Chair. He is on the editorial board of the journals Discrete and Computational Geometry,[3] Computational Geometry: Theory and Applications,[4] Journal of Computational Geometry,[5] and the Journal of Graph Algorithms and Applications,[6] and is an editor-in-chief of the International Journal of Computational Geometry and Applications.[7] He has served on numerous program committees and was co-chair of the PC for the 21st ACM Symposium on Computational Geometry (2005).

Research

Mitchell's primary research area is computational geometry, applied to problems in computer graphics, visualization, air traffic management, manufacturing, and geographic information systems.

Awards and honors

Mitchell has been an NSF Presidential Young Investigator, Fulbright Scholar, and a recipient of the President's Award for Excellence in Scholarship and Creative Activities. He shared the 2010 Gödel Prize with Sanjeev Arora for devising a polynomial-time approximation scheme for the Euclidean travelling salesman problem.[8][9] In 2011 the Association for Computing Machinery listed him as an ACM Fellow for his research in computational geometry and approximation algorithms.[10] He has also won numerous teaching awards.

References

External links