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Ellis L Johnson

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Citizenship
  
American

Name
  
Ellis Johnson


Fields
  
Mathematician

Academic advisor
  
George Dantzig

Born
  
July 26, 1938 (
1938-07-26
)

Institutions
  
Georgia Institute of Technology Thomas J. Watson Research Center

Alma mater
  
Georgia Institute of Technology University of California at Berkeley

Known for
  
Integer programming Combinatorial optimization Cyclic group Crew scheduling

Education
  
University of California, Berkeley, Georgia Institute of Technology

Ellis Lane Johnson is the Professor Emeritus and the Coca-Cola Chaired Professor in the H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, Georgia.

Contents

Early life and education

Johnson received a B.A. in mathematics at Georgia Tech and earned his Ph.D. in operations research from the University of California at Berkeley in 1965. He was student of George Dantzig

Career

in 1950s, Dr. Ellis Johnson served as director of the Operations Research Office of the Johns Hopkins University. Later, after three years at Yale University, Johnson joined the IBM T.J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, where he founded and managed the Optimization Center from 1982 until 1990, when he was named IBM Fellow. In 1980-1981, Johnson visited the University of Bonn, Germany, as recipient of the Humboldt Senior Scientist Award.

From 1990 to 1993, Johnson began teaching and conducting research at Georgia Tech, where he co-founded and co-directed the Logistics Engineering Center with Professor George Nemhauser. He joined the Georgia Tech faculty in 1994.

Johnson's research interests in logistics include crew scheduling and real-time repair, fleet assignment and routing, distribution planning, network problems, and combinatorial optimization.

Awards and honors

Johnson has received a number of awards, including the following:

  • 2009 Fellow, Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics
  • 2002 Fellow, INFORMS
  • 2000 John von Neumann Theory Prize, INFORMS
  • 1990 IBM Fellow
  • 1988 National Academy of Engineers
  • 1985 George B. Dantzig Prize for his research in mathematical programming
  • 1983 Lanchester Prize for his paper with Crowder and Padberg
  • 1980 Senior Scientist Award, Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  • John von Neumann Theory Prize

    Johnson received the John von Neumann Theory Prize jointly with Manfred W. Padberg in recognition of his fundamental contributions to integer programming and combinatorial optimization. Their work combines theory with algorithm development, computational testing, and solution of hard real-world problems in the best tradition of Operations Research and the Management Sciences. In their joint work with Crowder and in subsequent work with others, they showed how to formulate and solve efficiently very large-scale practical 0-1 programs with important applications in industry and transportation.

    The selection committee cited among Johnson’s contribution three important and influential papers he produced in the early seventies—two of them with Ralph Gomory—which developed and extended in significant ways the group theoretic approach to integer programming pioneered by Gomory. In particular, Johnson showed how the approach can be extended to the case of mixed integer programs. As an outgrowth of this work, Johnson contributed decisively to the development of what became known as the subadditive approach to integer programming. Still in the seventies, in a seminal paper co-authored with Jack Edmonds, Johnson showed how several basic optimization problems defined on graphs can be solved in polynomial time by reducing them to weighted matching problems. One example is finding minimum T-joins (i.e., edge sets whose only endpoints of odd degree are those in a specified vertex set T). An important special case is the seemingly difficult problem of finding a shortest tour in a graph that traverses every edge at least once, known as the Postman problem. The stark contrast between the polynomial solvability of this problem and the intractability of the traveling salesman problem in which the tour is supposed to traverse vertices rather than edges, helped focus attention on the phenomenon so typical of combinatorial structures: two seemingly very similar problems turn out in reality to be vastly different.

    References

    Ellis L. Johnson Wikipedia