Maurice Peter Herlihy (born 4 January 1954) is an American computer scientist active in the field of multiprocessor synchronization. Herlihy has contributed to areas including theoretical foundations of wait-free synchronization, linearizable data structures, applications of combinatorial topology to distributed computing, as well as hardware and software transactional memory. He is the An Wang Professor of Computer Science at Brown University, where he has been a member of the faculty since 1994.

Herlihy was elected a member of the National Academy of Engineering in 2013 for concurrent computing techniques for linearizability, non-blocking data structures, and transactional memory.

Recognition

  • 2003 Dijkstra Prize
  • 2004 Gödel Prize
  • 2005 Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery
  • 2012 Dijkstra Prize
  • 2013 W. Wallace McDowell Award
  • 2013 National Academy of Engineering
  • 2014 National Academy of Inventors Fellow
  • 2015 American Academy of Arts and Sciences Member
  • 2022 Dijkstra Prize

References

External links

  • Website
  • Maurice Herlihy at the Mathematics Genealogy Project



Free Course Maurice Herlihy Applying Combinatorial Topology to

Death Notice of Hilary Herlihy (née McCarthy) (Mardyke, Cork) rip.ie

Transactional Memory Maurice Herlihy

Oct. 13 Correctness and Atomicity with Maurice Herlihy Department

Martin Herlihy Parents Father Tim Herlihy And Mother