Biography:Ran Raz

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Ran Raz
רָן רָז
רן רז, 2011.jpg
Alma materHebrew University of Jerusalem
AwardsErdős Prize
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions
ThesisCommunication Complexity and Circuit Lower Bounds (1992)
Doctoral advisor
Websitewww.wisdom.weizmann.ac.il/~ranraz/

Ran Raz (Hebrew: רָן רָז‎) is a computer scientist who works in the area of computational complexity theory. He was a professor in the faculty of mathematics and computer science at the Weizmann Institute. He is now a professor of computer science at Princeton University.[1]

Ran Raz received his Ph.D. at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1992 under Avi Wigderson and Michael Ben-Or.[2]

Ran Raz is well known for his work on interactive proof systems. His two most-cited papers are (Raz 1998) on multi-prover interactive proofs and (Raz Safra) on probabilistically checkable proofs.[3]

Ran Raz received the Erdős Prize in 2002. His work has been awarded in the top conferences in theoretical computer science. In 2004, he received the best paper award in ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing (STOC) for (Raz 2004),[4] and the best paper award in IEEE Conference on Computational Complexity (CCC) for (Raz Shpilka).[5] In 2008, the work (Moshkovitz Raz) received the best paper award in IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS).[6]

Selected publications

Notes

  1. "Raz, Weinberg Deepen Faculty's Leadership in Critical Areas | Computer Science Department at Princeton University" (in en). https://www.cs.princeton.edu/news/raz-weinberg-deepen-faculty%E2%80%99s-leadership-critical-areas. 
  2. Ran Raz at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. Citations counts for (Raz 1998) as of 21 Feb 2009: Google Scholar: 313, ISI Web of Knowledge: 120, ACM Digital Library: 57 + 17, MathSciNet: 53. Citations counts for (Raz Safra) as of 21 Feb 2009: Google Scholar: 314, ACM Digital Library: 71, MathSciNet: 59.
  4. Proc. STOC 2004: "STOC 2004 Conference Awards", page x. [1]. One of two award papers.
  5. Proc. CCC 2004: "Awards", page x. [2].
  6. Proc. FOCS 2008: "Foreword", page xii. [3].