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Arto Salomaa

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Nationality
  
Finnish

Role
  
Mathematician

Institutions
  
Turun Yliopisto

Education
  
University of Turku

Alma mater
  
Turun Yliopisto

Doctoral advisor
  
Kustaa Inkeri

Name
  
Arto Salomaa


Arto Salomaa httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
6 June 1934 (age 89) Turku, Finland (
1934-06-06
)

Fields
  
Mathematics, Computer Science

Doctoral students
  
Neil D. Jones, Jarkko Kari, Lila Kari, Paul Vitanyi

Books
  
DNA Computing: New Com, Automata‑theoretic aspects of formal po, Computation and automata, Chinese Remainder Theorem, Public‑Key Cryptography

Similar People
  
Grzegorz Rozenberg, Gheorghe Paun, Paul Vitanyi, George Katona

Tucs distinguished lecture 23 1 2015 arto salomaa


Arto K. Salomaa (born 6 June 1934) is a Finnish mathematician and computer scientist. His research career, which spans over forty years, is focused on formal languages and automata theory.

Contents

Arto Salomaa Arto Salomaa Wikipedia

Western convocation june 13 arto salomaa


Early life and education

Salomaa was born in Turku, Finland on June 6, 1934. He earned a Bachelor's degree from University of Turku in 1954 and a PhD from the same university in 1960. Salomaa's father was a professor of philosophy at the University of Turku. Salomaa was introduced to the theory of automata and formal languages during seminars at Berkeley given by John Myhill in 1957.

Career

In 1965, Salomaa became a professor of mathematics at the University of Turku, a position he retired from in 1999. He also spent two years in the late 1960s at the University of Western Ontario in London, Ontario, Canada, and two years in the 1970s at the University of Aarhus in Aarhus, Denmark.

Salomaa was president of the European Association for Theoretical Computer Science from 1979 until 1985.

Publications

Salomaa has authored or co-authored 46 textbooks, including "Theory of Automata" (1969), "Formal Languages" (1973), "The Mathematical Theory of L-Systems" (1980, with Grzegorz Rozenberg), "Jewels of Formal Language Theory" (1981) "Public-Key Cryptography" (1990) and "DNA Computing" (1998, with Grzegorz Rozenberg and Gheorghe Paun). With Rozenberg, Salomaa edited "Handbook of Formal Languages" (1997), a 3-volume, 2000-page reference on formal language theory. These books have often become standard references in their respective areas. For example, "Formal Languages" was reported in 1991 to be among the 100 most cited texts in mathematics.

Salomaa has also published over 400 articles in scientific journals during his professional career. He has authored also non-scientific articles such as "What computer scientists should know about sauna". After his retirement, Arto Salomaa has published almost another 100 scientific articles.

Awards and recognition

Salomaa has been awarded the title of Academician by the Academy of Finland, one of twelve living Finnish individuals awarded the title. He also received the EATCS Award in 2004. Salomaa has received seven honorary degrees. On June 13, 2013, Salomaa was awarded a Doctor Honoris Causa from the University of Western Ontario.

Personal life

Salomaa married in 1959. He has two children, Kirsti and Kai, the latter of whom is a professor of Computer Science at Queen's University and also works in the field of formal languages and automata theory.

References

Arto Salomaa Wikipedia