Imre Simon
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (July 2015) |
Imre Simon | |
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Born | |
Died | 13 August 2009 | (aged 65)
Nationality | |
Citizenship | |
Scientific career | |
Doctoral advisor | Janusz Brzozowski |
Imre Simon (August 14, 1943 – August 13, 2009) was a Hungarian-born Brazilian mathematician and computer scientist.
His research mainly focused on theoretical computer science, automata theory, and tropical mathematics, a subject he founded, and which was so named because he lived in Brazil. He was a professor of mathematics at the University of São Paulo in Brazil. He was also actively interested in questions of intellectual property and collaborative work, and was an enthusiastic advocate for open collaborative information systems, of which Wikipedia is an example.[citation needed]
Simon came to Brazil with his parents after the Hungarian Revolution of 1956. He studied electrical engineering in Sao Paulo (with Tomasz Kowaltowski), received his diploma in 1966, and his Ph.D. at the University of Waterloo in 1972, under Janusz Brzozowski with the thesis: Hierarchies of Events with Dot-Depth One.[1]
He died of lung cancer in São Paulo, Brazil on August 13, 2009, aged 65 just a day short of his 66th birthday.
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- Brazilian computer scientists
- Hungarian emigrants to Brazil
- 20th-century Brazilian mathematicians
- 2009 deaths
- 1943 births
- Deaths from lung cancer in Brazil
- Recipients of the Great Cross of the National Order of Scientific Merit (Brazil)
- Academic staff of the University of São Paulo
- Brazilian scientist stubs
- Mathematician stubs