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American computer scientist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Michael Allen Langston is a professor of electrical engineering and computer science at the University of Tennessee.[1] In several publications with Michael Fellows in the late 1980s, he showed that the Robertson–Seymour theorem could be used to prove the existence of a polynomial-time algorithm for problems such as linkless embedding without allowing the algorithm itself to be explicitly constructed;[2][3] this work was foundational to the field of parameterized complexity.[4] He has also collaborated with scientists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory on the computational analysis of genomics data and reconstruction of gene regulatory networks.[5][6]
Langston received his doctorate (PhD) in 1981 at Texas A&M University in computing science.[1] His dissertation was Processor scheduling with improved heuristic algorithms.[7] He worked at Washington State University, the University of Illinois, and the University of Maryland Global Campus Europe before taking his present position at the University of Tennessee.[5] He has also served in the United States Army as a paratrooper and officer in the 17th Cavalry Regiment and as personnel database manager for VII Corps.[8]
His honors include the Commendation Medal, U.S. Army, 1979; the Distinguished Teaching Award, Texas A&M University, 1981;[5] the Distinguished Service Prize, ACM Special Interest Group on Algorithms and Computation Theory, 2001;[9] and the Chancellor's Award for Research and Creative Achievement, University of Tennessee, 1994[5] and 2014.
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