Chris Verhoef Explained

Chris Verhoef
Birth Name:Christopher Verhoef
Birth Date:1962
Nationality:Dutch
Workplaces:Vrije Universiteit
Alma Mater:University of Amsterdam
Fields:Computer Science
Known For:Structured operational semantics
Website:Homepage at cs.vu.nl

Christopher (Chris) Verhoef (born 1962) is a Dutch computer scientist, and Professor of Computer Science at the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam.

Biography

Born in Kedichem in 1962, Verhoef received his PhD in computer science at the University of Amsterdam in 1992 under supervision of Jan Bergstra with the thesis "Linear unary operators in process algebra."

Verhoef had done his graduate work at the Programming Research Group of the University of Amsterdam, where in 1990 he had published his first report "On the register operator." Early 1990s he joined the Department of Mathematics and Computing Science of Eindhoven University of Technology. One of his first research interests was the Algebra of Communicating Processes, an "algebraic theory to describe processes that can communicate."[1] This field was initially developed by Jan Bergstra and Jan Willem Klop in 1982. With Alban Ponse and Bas van Vlijmen, Verhoef initiated the first two International Workshops on the Algebra of Communicating Processes in 1994 and 1995.

In 1996/97 he returned to Programming Research Group of the University of Amsterdam, where he started focussing on Reverse engineering, the "theory and practice of recovering information from existing software and systems."[2] In 1997 he co-chaired the Fourth IEEE Computer Society Working Conference on Reverse Engineering.

Since early 2000s Verhoef is Professor of Computer Science at the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam. His research interests further extend in the fields of the structured operational semantics, and IT Portfolio Management.

Selected publications

Articles, a selection.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.cs.vu.nl/~x/acp.html Algebra of Communicating Processes
  2. http://www.cs.vu.nl/~x/knipselkrant/sciencechannel.html The dark side of the Millennium Bug