Sambasiva Rao Kosaraju is an Indian-American professor of computer science at Johns Hopkins University, and division director for Computing & Communication Foundations at the National Science Foundation.[1] He has done extensive work in the design and analysis of parallel and sequential algorithms.
S. Rao Kosaraju | |
---|---|
Alma mater | IIT Kharagpur |
Known for | Kosaraju's algorithm |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Computer science |
Doctoral advisor | Hisao Yamada |
Education
editHe was born in India, and he did his bachelor's degree in engineering from Andhra University, Masters from IIT Kharagpur, and holds a PhD from University of Pennsylvania.[2]
Career
editIn 1978, he wrote a paper describing a method to efficiently compute strongly connected members of a directed graph, a method later called Kosaraju's algorithm. Along with Paul Callahan, he published many articles on efficient algorithms for computing the well-separated pair decomposition of a point set. His research efforts include efficient algorithms for pattern matching, data structure simulations, universal graphs, DNA sequence assembly, derandomization and investigations of immune system responses.[2]
In 1995, he was inducted as a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery. He is also a fellow of the IEEE. A common saying at Johns Hopkins University, "At some point, the learning stops and the pain begins." has been attributed to him. There used to be a shrine in the CS Undergraduate Lab in his honour.[citation needed]
References
edit- ^ Staff Announcement – CCF, Farnam Jahanian, NSF, retrieved 2014-01-14.
- ^ a b "S. Rao Kosaraju's home page". www.cs.jhu.edu. Retrieved 31 October 2016.
External links
edit- Callahan, Paul B.; Kosaraju, Sambasiva Rao (1992), "A decomposition of multidimensional point sets with applications to k-nearest-neighbors and n-body potential fields (preliminary version)", STOC '92: Proc. ACM Symp. Theory of Computing, ACM.
- S. Rao Kosaraju at the Mathematics Genealogy Project