List of Carnegie Mellon University people explained
This is a list of notable people associated with Carnegie Mellon University in the United States of America.
Notable students and alumni
- Daniel Nagin (B.S, M.S. 1971, Ph.D. 1976, Professor), criminologist, 2014
- Raoul Bott (Ph.D. 1949), Mathematical, Statistical, and Computer Sciences, 1987
- Allen Newell (Ph.D. 1957, Professor), Mathematical, Statistical, and Computer Sciences, 1992
- George Pake (B.S., M.S. 1945), Physical Sciences, 1987
- Frederick Rossini (B.S. 1925, M.S. 1926, DSc (hon.) 1948), Chemistry
Business
- Paul Allaire (M.B.A 1966), former Xerox director (1986 - 1990) CEO (1990 - 2000) and Chairman (1991 - 2000)
- Kushagra Bajaj (B.S.), Vice Chairman of Bajaj Group
- Ted Decker, (M.B.A. 1993), CEO and president of The Home Depot[1]
- Francisco D'Souza (Master of Science in Industrial Administration 1992), CEO of Cognizant Technology Solutions
- Dina Dublon (Master of Science in Industrial Administration 1979), former EVP and CFO of JP Morgan Chase; board member of Microsoft, Accenture, PepsiCo, and Carnegie Mellon University
- Marc Ewing (B.S. 1992), co-founder of Red Hat Inc., maker of Red Hat Enterprise Linux
- Cormac Kinney (B.S. 1993, Master of Science in Industrial Administration 1994), software inventor and entrepreneur
- Alexander Knaster (B.S. 1980), billionaire private equity investor; founder and chairman of Pamplona Capital Management
- Jim Levy (B.S. 1965, Master of Science in Industrial Administration 1966), founding CEO of Activision (1979–1986)
- Andrew Ng (B.S. 1997), co-founder of education technology company Coursera, director of Stanford University's Artificial Intelligence Lab
- Frank Marshall (B.S.), former Director of Juniper Networks, former Vice President of Cisco (1992–1997)
- Gerald C. Meyers (B.S., M.S.), former Chairman of American Motors
- Ted Nierenberg (B.S. 1944), founder of Dansk International Designs[2]
- David Tepper (Master of Science in Industrial Administration 1982), founder and Chairman of Appaloosa Management, owner of the NFL's Carolina Panthers, and the MLS's Charlotte FC
- Madhavi Vuppalapati, CEO and Chairperson of Prithvi Information Solutions.[3]
- Romesh Wadhwani (M.S., Ph.D.), billionaire private equity investor; founder and chairman of Symphony Technology Group
- Charles Erwin Wilson (1909), CEO of General Motors (1946 - 1953), President of General Motors (1941 - 1953) (See also: Government and politics section)
- Sulajja Firodia Motwani, Indian woman entrepreneur
- Sunil Wadhwani, co-founder of Mastech Digital and IGATE
- Brian Olsavsky (M.B.A), CFO of Amazon[4]
Architecture and design
Academia
Other prominent faculty
Sports
NFL
Notable faculty
- Alan Perlis (B.S. 1943, Professor 1956–1971), compiler construction, 1966 – first Turing Award winner
- Allen Newell (Ph.D. 1957, Professor 1961–1992) and Herbert A. Simon (Professor), artificial intelligence, 1975
- Dana S. Scott (Professor 1981–2003), nondeterministic machines, 1976
- Robert Floyd (Professor 1963–1968), methodologies for the creation of efficient and reliable software, 1978
- Raj Reddy (Professor 1969–present), artificial intelligence, 1994
- Manuel Blum (Professor 1999–2018), computational complexity theory, 1995
- Edmund M. Clarke (Professor 1982–2020), model checking, 2007
- Leslie Valiant (Professor 1973–1974), machine learning, 2010
- William Mattis (Professor 1976–1993), artificial intelligence, 2012
- Geoffrey Hinton (Professor 1982–1987), artificial intelligence, 2018
- Herbert A. Simon (Professor), Behavior and Social Sciences, 1986
- Paul Lauterbur (Research Associate, Mellon Institute, 1951–1953), Physical Sciences, 1987
- Allen Newell (Ph.D. 1957, Professor), Mathematical, Statistical, and Computer Sciences, 1992
- Luis von Ahn (Ph.D. 2005), assistant professor of computer science, 2006
- Yoky Matsuoka, assistant professor affiliated with the Robotics Institute, the Department of Mechanical Engineering, and the Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition (2001–2006), 2007
- Anna Deavere Smith, acting instructor (1970–1971), 1996
- Dawn Song (M.S. 1999), professor of computer science (2002–2007), 2010
- Terrance Hayes, professor of poetry (2001–2013)
Other prominent faculty
- Igor Ansoff (Professor), "father of strategic management" and Professor of Industrial Administration
- Jerome Apt (Professor), former NASA astronaut and now Professor of Technology; Executive Director of Carnegie Mellon Electricity Industry Center, Graduate School of Industrial Administration
- Elizabeth Bailey (Professor 1983–1991), former Dean and Professor of Economics, Industrial Administration and Public Policy, Graduate School of Industrial Administration, now John C. Hower Professor of Business and Public Policy at Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania
- Lenore Blum (Professor), renowned for being a National Science Foundation Career Advancement Award winner and for her contributions to Computer Science, wife of Manuel Blum
- Peter Braam (Professor), computer scientist, founder of Lustre file system, Intermezzo file system
- Kathleen Carley (Professor), Computational sociologist and pioneer of dynamic network analysis
- William W. Cooper (Professor), professor of operations research and accounting at the Tepper School of Business and founding Dean of the Heinz College
- Edward Creutz (Professor), physics, the Manhattan Project
- Lorrie Cranor (Professor), expert in information privacy and Chief Technologist of the Federal Trade Commission
- Anthony Daniels (Adjunct Professor), Actor famous for portraying C-3PO in the Star Wars films
- Robyn Dawes (Professor), pioneer in the field of mathematical psychology
- Scott Dodelson (Professor, 2017–present), astrophysicist and former Fermilab scientist
- David Farber (Professor, 2003–present), co-creator of ARPANET and former Chief Technologist for the FCC
- Richard Florida (Professor, 1987 - 2005), economist and author of Rise of the Creative Class
- David Garlan (Professor, 1990–present), a pioneer in software architecture and self-adaptive software systems
- James Goodby (Professor, 1989–present), Distinguished Service Professor of Engineering and Public Policy, former U.S. Foreign Service Officer including US Ambassador to Finland (1980–1981)
- William D. Haseman (faculty member, 1975–1980), IBM Professor of Information Technology Management at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, founding Director for the Center for Technology Innovation in Milwaukee, and author
- John Heinz III (faculty member, 1970–1971), Senator from Pennsylvania
- Robert Hess (1938–1994), President of Brooklyn College
- Israel Hicks (1943–2010), stage director who presented August Wilson's entire 10-play Pittsburgh Cycle[6]
- Henry Hornbostel (Professor), helped found the Carnegie Mellon School of Architecture; designed the original buildings on campus
- Watts Humphrey (Professor), former Vice President of IBM, Fellow of Software Engineering Institute
- Jeffrey Hunker (Professor), Senior Director for Critical Infrastructure for the United States National Security Council (1999 - 2001), Deputy Assistant to the Secretary of Commerce (1996 - 1998), senior Department of Commerce official for environmental policy (1996 - 1998), former Senior Policy Advisor to the Secretary of Commerce (1993 - 1996), former Dean of the Heinz College
- Robert Kaplan (Professor), co-creator of the Balanced Scorecard
- Michael Keaton (Adjunct Professor), actor known for films such as Beetlejuice, Batman, and Batman Returns
- Roberta Klatzky (Professor), cognitive scientist and leading researcher in haptics
- Mordecai Lawner, actor and former faculty member for the theater program[7]
- Jennifer Lerner, decision scientist and psychologist in the Department of Social and Decision Sciences
- Golan Levin, new media artist and current faculty member of the School of Art
- Margot Livesey, author of six novels, short stories, and essays on fiction
- George Loewenstein (Professor), pioneer in the field of Behavioural Economics and faculty in the Department of Social and Decision Sciences
- Alex John London[8] (Clara L. West Professor of Ethics and Philosophy), Director of the Center for Ethics and Policy[9] at Carnegie Mellon University, Elected Fellow of the Hastings Center; prominent bioethicist
- Brian MacWhinney (Professor), leading language acquisition researcher and creator of CHILDES database
- Allan Meltzer (Professor), chairperson of a special U.S. congressional commission that studied how the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund operated; it made its recommendations for changes in March 2000 in its report to the U.S. Congress
- Richard Rashid (Professor, 1979 - 1991), computer scientist, Microsoft Research SVP
- Robert V. Rice (Professor), biochemist and leading researcher in smooth muscle myosin
- Scott Sandage (Professor), noted cultural historian in the Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences
- Robert Schmertz (Professor), folk artist and professor of architecture
- Walter Dill Scott (Professor, 1916–1918), pioneer in applied psychology, President of the American Psychological Association, President of Northwestern University
- Mel Shapiro (Head of Drama Department), Tony Award-winning writer and director
- Robert S. Siegler (Professor), Teresa Heinz Professor of Psychology at Carnegie Mellon University and recipient of the American Psychological Association's 2005 Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award
- Daniel Sleator (Professor), Paris Kanellakis Award-winning professor of computer science known for inventing data structures such as the splay tree
- Alfred Spector (Professor), Vice President of Research and Special Initiatives at Google
- Latanya Sweeney (Professor), former Chief Technologist of the Federal Trade Commission
- Joe William Trotter Jr. (Professor), eminent scholar of African American labor and urban life in the Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences, and an elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Honus Wagner, baseball and basketball coach, one of the first five members of the Baseball Hall of Fame
- Arnold R. Weber (Professor and Provost), professor in economics and public policy at Carnegie Mellon and President of the University of Colorado and Northwestern University
- Jerome Wolken (1917–1999), biophysicist and head of biology department[10]
- Clarence Zener (Professor, 1968 - 1993), theoretical physicist, namesake of the Zener diode, Zener voltage, and Zener pinning
Presidents of Carnegie Mellon University
- Arthur Hamerschlag, 1903 - 1922
- Thomas Baker, 1922 - 1935
- Robert Doherty, 1936 - 1950
- John Warner, 1950 - 1965
- Guyford Stever, 1965 - 1972
- Richard Cyert, 1972 - 1990
- Robert Mehrabian, 1990 - 1997
- Jared Cohon, 1997 - 2013
- Subra Suresh, 2013 - 2017
- Farnam Jahanian, 2018 - present
Founders and major benefactors of Carnegie Mellon University
The Mellon Family of Pittsburgh
Fictional alumni
- Eleanor Bartlet, first daughter of the United States in The West Wing
- Doctor Colette Green, research associate from the PC game
- Dr. Bunsen Honeydew, scientist from The Muppet Show who graduated from "Carnegie-Melonhead University"
- Brian Kinney and Ben Bruckner, main characters in Queer as Folk
- Randall and Beth Pearson, characters on This is Us, met while attending the school
- Sebastian Shaw, the Black King of the Hellfire Club of the Marvel Universe (Earth-616)
- Bethany Sloane, main character of the film Dogma
- Jaime Sommers, title character of The Bionic Woman
- Johanna 'Jo' Mitchell, main character of film Mean Girls 2
Notes and References
- News: Fairview native is Home Depot president/COO. Erie Times-News. Gannett Company. Myers. Valerie. 19 October 2020. 27 August 2022.
- Fox, Margalit. "Theodore Nierenberg, Founder of Dansk, Dies at 86", The New York Times, August 3, 2009. Retrieved August 4, 2009.
- Web site: Vuppalapati Madhavi . Prithvisolutions.com . 2014-03-20.
- Web site: Brian T. Olsavsky . Amazon.com.
- Web site: Iran Center for Management Studies, Tehran, Iran .
- Weber, Bruce. "Israel Hicks, Director of August Wilson's Cycle, Dies at 66", The New York Times, July 7, 2010. Accessed July 8, 2010.
- News: Alex . Stedman . Mordecai Lawner, Actor Who Appeared in 'Annie Hall,' Dies at 86 . . 2014-12-14 . 2014-12-14.
- Web site: Alex John London. Cmu.edu. 2 July 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20170603181019/http://www.cmu.edu/dietrich/philosophy/people/faculty/core-faculty/london.html. 3 June 2017. dead.
- Web site: Center for Ethics and Policy. Centerforethicsandpolicy.com. 2 July 2018.
- Saxon, Wolfgang. "Jerome Wolken, 82, Scientist Who Gave Sight to Some Blind", The New York Times, May 20, 1999. Accessed July 6, 2010.