Philipp Hennig
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Philipp Hennig
Summary
Philipp Hennig is a human[1]. He worked as a physicist[2], university teacher[3], and scientist[4].
Key Facts
- Philipp Hennig's professions included physicist[2].
- Philipp Hennig worked as a university teacher[3].
- Philipp Hennig's professions included scientist[4].
- Philipp Hennig's field of work was physics[5].
- Philipp Hennig's field of work was probabilistic method[6].
- Philipp Hennig's field of work was numerical method[7].
- Philipp Hennig's field of work was machine learning[8].
- Philipp Hennig's field of work was intelligent system[9].
- Philipp Hennig was employed by University of Tübingen[10].
- Philipp Hennig was employed by Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems[11].
- Philipp Hennig was educated at University of Cambridge[12].
- Philipp Hennig's doctoral advisor was David J. C. MacKay[13].
- Philipp Hennig is recorded as male[14].
- Philipp Hennig's instance of is recorded as human[15].
- Philipp Hennig supervised Maren Mahsereci as a doctoral student[16].
- Philipp Hennig supervised Michael Schober as a doctoral student[17].
- Philipp Hennig supervised Edgar Dietrich Klenske as a doctoral student[18].
- Philipp Hennig supervised Hans Kersting as a doctoral student[19].
- Philipp Hennig's ISNI is recorded as 0000000427078852[20].
- Philipp Hennig's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 3262155105817176320009[21].
- Philipp Hennig's GND ID is recorded as 1178518078[22].
- Philipp Hennig's ORCID iD is recorded as 0000-0001-7293-6092[23].
- Philipp Hennig's Mathematics Genealogy Project ID is recorded as 240325[24].
- Philipp Hennig's NL CR AUT ID is recorded as ntk20231179474[25].
- Philipp Hennig's family name is recorded as Hennig[26].
Body
Education
Philipp Hennig was educated at University of Cambridge[12]. His doctoral advisor was David J. C. MacKay[13].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include physicist[2], university teacher[3], and scientist[4]. Fields of work include physics[5], a branch of science[27]; probabilistic method[6]; numerical method[7]; machine learning[8], an academic discipline[28]; and intelligent system[9]. Employers include University of Tübingen[10], a comprehensive university[29], in Germany[30], founded in 1477[31], headquartered in Tübingen[32] and Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems[11], a Max Planck Institute[33], in Germany[34], founded in 1921[35]. Doctoral students include Maren Mahsereci[16], a computer scientist[36]; Michael Schober[17], a computer scientist[37]; Edgar Dietrich Klenske[18], b. 1986[38]; and Hans Kersting[19], a mathematician[39], b. 1990[40], specialised in mathematics[41].
Why It Matters
Philipp Hennig's notable doctoral advisees include Maren Mahsereci[42], a computer scientist[43]; Michael Schober[44], a computer scientist[45]; and Hans Kersting[46], a mathematician[47], b. 1990[48], specialised in mathematics[49].
FAQs
What did Philipp Hennig do for work?
Philipp Hennig worked as physicist[2], university teacher[3], and scientist[4].
Where did Philipp Hennig go to school?
Philipp Hennig was educated at University of Cambridge[12].