Olivier Danvy

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Olivier Danvy
Olivier Danvy at the ICFP 2008 conference.
NationalityFrench
Alma materUniversité Paris VI – Pierre et Marie Curie[1]
Known forPartial evaluation, continuations
Scientific career
FieldsComputer science
InstitutionsBRICS, Aarhus University
Doctoral advisorBernard Robinet & Emmanuel Saint-James[1]
Doctoral studentsCharles Consel, John Hatcliff, et al.[1]
Websitecs.au.dk/~danvy

Olivier Danvy is a French computer scientist specializing in programming languages, partial evaluation, and continuations at the University of Aarhus in Denmark.

Danvy received his PhD degree from the Université Paris VI in 1986.[1] He is notable for the number of scientific papers which acknowledge his help. Writing in Nature, editor Declan Butler reports on an analysis of acknowledgments on nearly one third of a million scientific papers and reports that Danvy is "the most thanked person in computer science".[2]

Danvy himself is quoted as being "stunned to find my name at the top of the list", ascribing his position to a "series of coincidences": he is multidisciplinary, is well travelled, is part of an international PhD programme, is a networker, and belongs to a university department with a long tradition of having many international visitors.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Olivier Danvy". The Mathematics Genealogy Project. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  2. ^ a b Butler, D. (2004). "Frenchman is most thanked computer scientist". Nature. 432 (7019): 790. doi:10.1038/432790b.

External links