Jean-Paul Delahaye (born 29 June 1952 in Saint-Mandé Seine) is a French computer scientist and mathematician.
Jean-Paul Delahaye | |
---|---|
Born | 29 June 1952 | (age 72)
Nationality | French |
Alma mater | University of Paris-Sud |
Scientific career | |
Fields | computer science Computational complexity theory computational game theory |
Doctoral advisor | Claude Brezinski |
Career
editDelahaye has been a professor of computer science at the Lille University of Science and Technology since 1988 and a researcher in the school's computer sciences lab since 1983. Since 1991 he has written a monthly column in Pour la Science, the French version of Scientific American, dealing with mathematical games and recreations, logic, and computer science.[1] He is a contributing author of the online scientific journal Interstices[2] and a science and mathematics advisor to the Encyclopædia Britannica.
Delahaye won the 1998 d'Alembert prize from the Société mathématique de France for his books and articles popularizing mathematics, especially for the book Le fascinant nombre Pi.[3]
Works
edit- Delahaye, J.-P. (1981). "Automatic selection of sequence transformations". Math. Comp. 37 (155): 197–204. doi:10.1090/S0025-5718-1981-0616372-5.
- Formal Methods in Artificial Intelligence, North-Oxford Academic, 1987, ISBN 0470208260
- Le fascinant nombre pi, Paris: Bibliothèque Pour la Science, 1997, ISBN 2902918259
References
edit- ^ Pour la Science official site
- ^ List of Authors who contributed to Interstices
- ^ "d'Alembert prize winners, La Société mathématique de France". Archived from the original on 2013-01-23. Retrieved 2013-12-20.
External links
edit- Media related to Jean-Paul Delahaye at Wikimedia Commons
- Jean-Paul Delahaye at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- Jean-Paul Delahaye's home page