Éva Tardos
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Éva Tardos
Summary
Éva Tardos is a human[1]. Her place of birth was Budapest[2]. She was born on +1957-10-01T00:00:00Z[3]. She worked as a mathematician[4], computer scientist[5], and university teacher[6]. She ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (36 views/month, #7,265 of 1,000,298).[7]
Key Facts
- Éva Tardos was born in Budapest[2].
- Éva Tardos was born on +1957-10-01T00:00:00Z[3].
- Éva Tardos held citizenship in Hungary[8].
- Éva Tardos held citizenship in United States[9].
- Hungarian was Éva Tardos's native language[10].
- Éva Tardos's professions included mathematician[4].
- Éva Tardos's professions included computer scientist[5].
- Éva Tardos's professions included university teacher[6].
- Éva Tardos's field of work was mathematics[11].
- Éva Tardos's field of work was algorithm[12].
- Éva Tardos was employed by Cornell University[13].
- Éva Tardos's doctoral advisor was András Frank[14].
- Éva Tardos received the Guggenheim Fellowship[15].
- Éva Tardos received the Gödel Prize[16].
- Éva Tardos received the Presidential Young Investigator Award[17].
- Éva Tardos received the Fulkerson Prize[18].
- Éva Tardos received the The George B. Dantzig Prize[19].
- Éva Tardos received the Van Wijngaarden Award[20].
- Éva Tardos was a member of National Academy of Sciences[21].
- Éva Tardos was a member of Hungarian Academy of Sciences[22].
- Éva Tardos was a member of American Academy of Arts and Sciences[23].
- Éva Tardos was a member of National Academy of Engineering[24].
- Éva Tardos was a member of Association for Computing Machinery[25].
- Éva Tardos was a member of Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics[26].
- Éva Tardos's image is recorded as Eva Tardos (2007).jpg[27].
Body
Origins and Family
Éva Tardos was born in Budapest[2]. She was born on +1957-10-01T00:00:00Z[3]. Hungarian was her native language[10].
Education
Éva Tardos's doctoral advisor was András Frank[14]. She earned the academic degree of Doctor of Philosophy[28].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include mathematician[4], computer scientist[5], and university teacher[6]. Fields of work include mathematics[11], an academic discipline[29] and algorithm[12]. Among Éva Tardos's employers was Cornell University[13]. Doctoral students include Tim Roughgarden[30], a computer scientist[31], b. 1975[32], of United States[33], awarded the Gödel Prize[34], specialised in game theory[35]; Georgios Piliouras[36], a researcher[37]; Bruce Edward Hoppe[38]; Wee-Liang Heng[39]; Kevin Wayne[40]; and Aaron Archer[41].
Recognition
Awards received include Guggenheim Fellowship[15], a fellowship grant[42], in United States[43], founded in 1925[44]; Gödel Prize[16], a science award[45], founded in 1992[46]; Presidential Young Investigator Award[17], an award[47]; Fulkerson Prize[18], a science award[48], in United States[49], founded in 1979[50]; The George B. Dantzig Prize[19], a science award[51], founded in 1982[52]; and Van Wijngaarden Award[20], a mathematics award[53], founded in 2006[54].
Why It Matters
Éva Tardos ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (36 views/month, #7,265 of 1,000,298).[7] She has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[55] She is known by 11 alternative names across languages and contexts.[56]
Her notable doctoral advisees include Tim Roughgarden[57], a computer scientist[58], b. 1975[59], of United States[60], awarded the Gödel Prize[61], specialised in game theory[62] and Kevin Wayne[63], a computer scientist[64], b. 1971[65], of United States[66].
FAQs
Where was Éva Tardos born?
Éva Tardos's place of birth was Budapest[2].
What did Éva Tardos do for work?
Éva Tardos worked as mathematician[4], computer scientist[5], and university teacher[6].
What awards did Éva Tardos receive?
Honors received include Guggenheim Fellowship[15], Gödel Prize[16], Presidential Young Investigator Award[17], and Fulkerson Prize[18].