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James H Davenport

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Name
  
James Davenport

Role
  
Computer scientist

Fields
  
Cryptography


James H. Davenport wwwbathacukcompscicontactsacademicsstaffd

Institutions
  
University of Cambridge University of Bath

Thesis
  
On the integration of algebraic functions (1979)

Doctoral advisor
  
John Peter Fitch Arthur Charles Norman

Doctoral students
  
John Abbott Daif Al-Kuwari Russell Bradford Emma Cliffe Michael Dewar Nicolas Doye Brian Dupee Andrew Holt Nicholas Howgrave-Graham Paul Libbrecht Nalina Phisanbut Michael Richardson Olga Tabachnikova

Books
  
On the integration of algebraic functions

People also search for
  
Bruno Buchberger, Andrea Asperti, John Peter Fitch, Arthur Charles Norman

Institution
  
University of Cambridge, University of Bath

James Harold Davenport (born 1953) is a British computer scientist who works in computer algebra. Having done his PhD and early research at the Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge, he is the Hebron and Medlock Professor of Information Technology at the University of Bath in Bath, England.

Contents

Early Work & Education

In 1969, the team that developed the ATM at IBM Hursley (UK) used parts from that project to build an IBM School Computer, as a community outreach project, and it toured the region. When it came to James Davenport’s school, he (at age 16) discovered that, although it was ostensibly a six-digit computer, the microcode had access to a 12-digit internal register to do multiply/divide. He therefore used this to implement Draim's algorithm from his father's book, The Higher Arithmetic, and was testing eight-digit numbers for primality until the teacher’s patience wore out. He worked in a government laboratory for nine months, again writing and using multiword arithmetic, but also using his knowledge of number theory to solve a problem in hashing, which earned him his first published paper at 18. He went to Cambridge University (Bachelor’s in 1974, Master’s in 1978, and PhD in 1980), to IBM Yorktown Heights for a year, back to Cambridge as a Research Fellow, to Grenoble for a year, before going to the relatively new University of Bath “for a couple of years" in 1983.

Research

Davenport is an author of a textbook about computer algebra and of many papers. He has been Project Chair of the European OpenMath Project and its successor Thematic Network, with responsibilities for aligning OpenMath and MathML, producing Content Dictionaries and supervised a Reduce-based OpenMath/MathML translator, and was Treasurer of the European Mathematical Trust. He was Founding Editor-in-Chief of the London Mathematical Society's Journal of Computation and Mathematics.

Personal life

Davenport is the son of Harold Davenport.

Currently (January-June 2017) a Fulbright CyberSecurity Scholar at New York University and maintains a blog

References

James H. Davenport Wikipedia