David Peleg
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David Peleg
Summary
David Peleg is a human[1]. He was born on +1957-00-00T00:00:00Z[2]. He worked as a computer scientist[3], engineer[4], dean[5], and professor[6]. He ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (16 views/month, #7,291 of 1,000,298).[7]
Key Facts
- David Peleg was born on +1957-00-00T00:00:00Z[2].
- David Peleg held citizenship in Israel[8].
- David Peleg worked as a computer scientist[3].
- David Peleg's professions included engineer[4].
- David Peleg worked as a dean[5].
- David Peleg's professions included professor[6].
- David Peleg's field of work was computer science[9].
- David Peleg was employed by Weizmann Institute of Science[10].
- David Peleg was educated at Weizmann Institute of Science[11].
- David Peleg's doctoral advisor was David Harel[12].
- David Peleg received the Dijkstra Prize[13].
- David Peleg received the Prize for Innovation in Distributed Computing[14].
- David Peleg received the ACM Fellow[15].
- David Peleg was a member of Association for Computing Machinery[16].
- David Peleg is recorded as male[17].
- David Peleg's instance of is recorded as human[18].
- David Peleg supervised Guy Kortsarz as a doctoral student[19].
- David Peleg supervised Avishai Wool as a doctoral student[20].
- David Peleg supervised Michael Elkin as a doctoral student[21].
- David Peleg supervised Yehuda Hassin as a doctoral student[22].
- David Peleg supervised Amos Korman as a doctoral student[23].
- David Peleg supervised Nissan Lev-Tov as a doctoral student[24].
- David Peleg supervised Yuval Emek as a doctoral student[25].
- David Peleg supervised Erez Kantor as a doctoral student[26].
- David Peleg supervised Shiri Chechik as a doctoral student[27].
Body
Origins and Family
David Peleg was born on +1957-00-00T00:00:00Z[2].
Education
David Peleg's education included a stint at Weizmann Institute of Science[11]. His doctoral advisor was David Harel[12].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include computer scientist[3], engineer[4], dean[5], and professor[6]. David Peleg's field of work was computer science[9]. Among his employers was Weizmann Institute of Science[10]. Doctoral students include Guy Kortsarz[19]; Avishai Wool[20]; Michael Elkin[21]; Yehuda Hassin[22]; Amos Korman[23], a researcher[28]; and Nissan Lev-Tov[24].
Recognition
Awards received include Dijkstra Prize[13], a science award[29], in Internationality[30], founded in 2000[31]; Prize for Innovation in Distributed Computing[14], an award[32]; and ACM Fellow[15], a fellowship award[33].
Why It Matters
David Peleg ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (16 views/month, #7,291 of 1,000,298).[7]
His notable doctoral advisees include Shiri Chechik[34], a computer scientist[35], of Israel[36], awarded the Krill Prize[37], specialised in computer science[38].
FAQs
What did David Peleg do for work?
David Peleg worked as computer scientist[3], engineer[4], dean[5], and professor[6].
Where did David Peleg go to school?
David Peleg was educated at Weizmann Institute of Science[11].
What awards did David Peleg receive?
Honors received include Dijkstra Prize[13], Prize for Innovation in Distributed Computing[14], and ACM Fellow[15].