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  1. Joseph Frederick Traub (June 24, 1932 – August 24, 2015) was an American computer scientist. He was the Edwin Howard Armstrong Professor of Computer Science at Columbia University and External Professor at the Santa Fe Institute.

  2. May 14, 2015 · He is Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Complexity and Associate Editor of Complexity. His numerous honors include election to the National Academy of Engineering in 1985, the 1991 Emanuel R. Piore Gold Medal from IEEE, and the 1992 Distinguished Service Award, Computer Research Association.

  3. Aug 26, 2015 · Joseph F. Traub, who founded the computer science department at Columbia University and who helped develop algorithms used in scientific computing in physics and mathematics as well as on Wall...

  4. Traub always described himself as lucky: Lucky in his early life that his parents were able to flee Nazi Germany in 1939 and settle in New York City; that he had a knack for math and problem-solving just when those skills were needed; that a fellow student’s prescient suggestion led him to visit IBM’s Watson Laboratories where he first ...

  5. www1.cs.columbia.edu › ~traub › htmlJoseph F. Traub

    J.F. Traub : Wikipedia Article : Computer History Museum Interview : CMU Digital Archive : Symposium 80th Birthday : CMU Library Picture : Complexity and Information : The Edge of Chaos : Machines Who Think : GRA Position : Research : Quantum Computation : Babbage Oral History : SIAM Oral History : Columbia 25th Anniversary Talk : CMU CS50 ...

  6. Joseph Traub: I was born in Karlsruhe, Germany in June of 1932. As you know, Hitler became chancellor of Germany in 1933. My father had a senior position at a bank in Karlsruhe. But in '38 the Nazis seized the bank, and it became time to emigrate.

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  8. Joseph F. Traub is the Edwin Howard Armstrong Professor of Computer Science at Columbia University and External Professor, Santa Fe Institute http://cs.columbia.edu/~traub. He is the author or editor of ten monographs and some 120 papers in computer science, mathematics, physics, finance, and economics.