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C Allin Cornell

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Nationality
  
United States

Fields
  
Earthquake engineering

Name
  
C. Cornell

Doctoral advisor
  
Jack Benjamin

Alma mater
  
Stanford University


C. Allin Cornell

Born
  
19 September 1938 Palo Alto, California, USA (
1938-09-19
)

Residence
  
Portola Valley, California, USA

Institutions
  
Stanford University MIT

Doctoral students
  
R. Corotis, R.K. Maguire, E. Vanmarcke, D. Veneziano

Died
  
December 14, 2007, Stanford, California, United States

Education
  
Stanford University (1964)

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Natural Sciences, US & Canada

C. (Carl) Allin Cornell (September 19, 1938 – December 14, 2007) was a civil engineer, a researcher, and a professor who made important contributions to reliability theory and earthquake engineering and, along with Dr. Luis Esteva, developed the field of Probabilistic Seismic Hazard Analysis in 1968.

Biography

Cornell was born in Mobridge, South Dakota in 1938. He received his A.B. in architecture in 1960 and M.S. and Ph.D. in civil engineering in 1961 and 1964 respectively, all at Stanford University. He held a professorship at the MIT from 1964 to 1983, and in 1983 became a Research Professor at Stanford University. He was awarded the Moisseiff Award (1977), two Norman Medals (1983, 2003), and the Fruedenthal Medal (1988) from the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE). He also received the Harry Fielding Reid Medal of the Seismological Society of America (SSA) in 2001, and the Earthquake Engineering Research Institute (EERI) Housner Medal in 2003. He was a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union (2002) and Member of the National Academy of Engineering (1981). His wife is Dr. Elisabeth Paté-Cornell, currently (2009) chair of Stanford’s Department of Management Science and Engineering, and one of his five children is Eric Allin Cornell Nobel Laureate in Physics.

He is best known for his 1968 seminal paper "Engineering Seismic Risk Analysis" that started the field of Probabilistic Seismic Hazard analysis (PSHA), his work in reliability especially on second-moment methods and reliability-based code calibration, and his development of the probabilistic framework for performance-based earthquake engineering that became the unifying equation of the Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research (PEER) Center. His 1971 book, Probability, Statistics, and Decision for Civil Engineers (coauthored with Jack Benjamin), exposed an entire generation of civil and structural engineering students to the field of probabilistic modeling and decision analysis, and remains a standard reference for students and researchers to this day.

As of 2011, the International Civil Engineering Risk and Reliability Association (CERRA) has renamed its quadrennial scientific recognition award as the C. Allin Cornell Award, in honor of its first recipient.

References

C. Allin Cornell Wikipedia