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Scott Aaronson

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Nationality
  
American

Name
  
Scott Aaronson

Doctoral advisor
  

Scott Aaronson The complexonaut MIT News
Born
  
May 21, 1981 (age 42) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA (
1981-05-21
)

Institutions
  
Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInstitute for Advanced StudyUniversity of Waterloo

Alma mater
  
Cornell UniversityUniversity of California, Berkeley

Known for
  
Quantum Turing with postselectionAlgebrization

Books
  
Quantum Computing Since Democritus

Fields
  
Computational complexity theory, Quantum computing

Notable awards
  
Similar People
  
Umesh Vazirani, Andris Ambainis, Peter Shor, Lance Fortnow, Avi Wigderson

Prof scott aaronson quantum computing and the limits of the efficiently computable


Scott Joel Aaronson (born May 21, 1981) is a theoretical computer scientist and faculty member in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science department at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Contents

Scott Aaronson Scott Aaronson Archives Chronotope

Tedxcaltech scott aaronson physics in the 21st century toiling in feynman s shadow


Early life and education

Scott Aaronson httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Aaronson grew up in the United States, though he spent a year in Asia when his father—a science writer turned public-relations executive—was posted to Hong Kong. He enrolled in a school there that permitted him to skip ahead several years in math, but upon returning to the US, he found his education too restrictive, getting bad grades and having run-ins with teachers. A change for the better came thanks to a program for gifted youngsters run by Clarkson University, which enabled the young Aaronson to accelerate his learning and apply for colleges while only in his freshman year of high school. He was accepted into Cornell University, where he obtained his BSc in computer science in 2000, then attended the University of California, Berkeley, for his PhD, which he got in 2004 under the supervision of Umesh Vazirani.

Scott Aaronson Scott Aaronson wins NSF39s Alan T Waterman Award MIT News

Aaronson had shown exceptional ability in mathematics from an early age, teaching himself calculus at the age of 11 after having his curiosity roused by the symbols in a babysitter's textbook. With computer programming, however, he always felt he lagged behind his peers, since it only came to his attention when he was 11. Many of the other bright kids he associated with had already been coding for years by then, and he felt he never fully made up the lost ground. Partly for this reason, he felt more drawn to the theoretical side to computing, particularly computational complexity. It was at Cornell that he heard about and became interested in quantum computing, and so it was to computational complexity and quantum computing that he decided to devote himself.

Career

Scott Aaronson Scott Aaronson Fundamental Limits of Quantum Computing

After postdoctorates at the Institute for Advanced Study and the University of Waterloo, he took a faculty position at MIT in 2007. His primary area of research is quantum computing and computational complexity theory more generally.

Awards

Scott Aaronson Prof Scott Aaronson Quantum Computing and the Limits of
  • Aaronson is one of two winners of the 2012 Alan T. Waterman Award.
  • Best Paper Award of CSR 2011 for the paper "The Equivalence of Sampling and Searching".
  • He is a founder of the Complexity Zoo wiki, which catalogs all classes of computational complexity. He is the author of the much-read blog "Shtetl-Optimized" as well as the essay "Who Can Name The Bigger Number?". The latter work, widely distributed in academic computer science, uses the concept of Busy Beaver Numbers as described by Tibor Rado to illustrate the limits of computability in a pedagogic environment. He has also taught a graduate-level survey course called Quantum Computing Since Democritus, for which the notes are available online and which has been published as a book by Cambridge University Press. It weaves together seemingly disparate topics into a cohesive whole, including quantum mechanics, complexity, free will, time travel, the anthropic principle and many others. Many of these interdisciplinary applications of computational complexity were later fleshed out in his article "Why Philosophers Should Care About Computational Complexity". An article of Aaronson's, "The Limits of Quantum Computers", was published in Scientific American, and he was a guest speaker at the 2007 Foundational Questions in Science Institute conference. Aaronson is frequently cited in non-academic press, such as Science News, The Age, ZDNet, Slashdot, New Scientist, The New York Times, and Forbes magazine.

    Intellectual property

    Aaronson was the subject of media attention in October 2007, when he accused an advertising agency of plagiarizing a lecture he wrote on quantum mechanics in an advertisement of theirs. He alleged that a commercial for Ricoh Australia by Sydney-based agency Love Communications appropriated content almost verbatim from the lecture. Aaronson received an apologetic email from the agency in which they claimed to have sought legal advice and did not believe that they were in violation of his copyright. Unsatisfied, Aaronson pursued the matter, and the agency settled the dispute without admitting wrongdoing by making a charitable contribution to two science organizations of his choice. Concerning this matter, Aaronson stated, "Someone suggested [on my blog] a cameo with the models but if was between that and a free printer, I think I'd take the printer."

    References

    Scott Aaronson Wikipedia