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Japanese mathematician (1947–2022) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Takao Nishizeki (西関 隆夫, Nishizeki Takao, 1947 – 30 January 2022[1]) was a Japanese mathematician and computer scientist who specialized in graph algorithms and graph drawing.
Nishizeki was born in 1947 in Fukushima, and was a student at Tohoku University, earning a bachelor's degree in 1969, a master's in 1971, and a doctorate in 1974. He continued at Tohoku as a faculty member, and became a full professor there in 1988.[2] He was the Dean of the Graduate School of Information Sciences, Tohoku University, from April 2008 to March 2010. He retired in 2010, becoming a professor emeritus at Tohoku University, but continued teaching as a professor at Kwansei Gakuin University until March 2015.[3] He was an Auditor of Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology from April 2016 to October 2018.
Nishizeki made significant contributions to algorithms for series–parallel graphs,[4] finding cliques in sparse graphs,[5] planarity testing[6] and the secret sharing with any access structure. He is the co-author of two books on planar graphs and graph drawing.[7]
In 1990, Nishizeki founded the annual International Symposium on Algorithms and Computation (ISAAC).[8]
At the 18th ISAAC symposium, in 2007, a workshop was held to celebrate his 60th birthday.[8]
In 1996, he became a life fellow of the IEEE "for contributions to graph algorithms with applications to physical design of electronic systems."[9] In 1996 he was selected as a fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery "for contributions to the design and analysis of efficient algorithms for planar graphs, network flows and VLSI routing".[10] Nishizeki was also a foreign fellow of the Bangladesh Academy of Sciences;[11] one of his students and frequent co-authors, Md. Saidur Rahman, is from Bangladesh.
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