Scott Aaronson | |
Birth Name: | Scott Joel Aaronson |
Birth Date: | May 21, 1981 |
Birth Place: | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States |
Nationality: | American |
Fields: | Computational complexity theory, quantum computing |
Doctoral Advisor: | Umesh Vazirani |
Spouse: | Dana Moshkovitz |
Website: | , |
Scott Joel Aaronson (born May 21, 1981)[1] is an American theoretical computer scientist and Schlumberger Centennial Chair of Computer Science at the University of Texas at Austin. His primary areas of research are computational complexity theory and quantum computing.
Aaronson is married to computer scientist Dana Moshkovitz. Aaronson identifies as Jewish.[2] [3] [4]
Aaronson grew up in the United States, though he spent a year in Asia when his father—a science writer turned public-relations executive—was posted to Hong Kong.[5] He enrolled in a school there that permitted him to skip ahead several years in math, but upon returning to the US, he found his education restrictive, getting bad grades and having run-ins with teachers. He enrolled in The Clarkson School, a gifted education program run by Clarkson University, which enabled Aaronson to apply for colleges while only in his freshman year of high school.[5] He was accepted into Cornell University, where he obtained his BSc in computer science in 2000,[6] and where he resided at the Telluride House.[7] He then attended the University of California, Berkeley, for his PhD, which he got in 2004 under the supervision of Umesh Vazirani.
Aaronson had shown ability in mathematics from an early age, teaching himself calculus at the age of 11, provoked by symbols in a babysitter's textbook. He discovered computer programming at age 11, and felt he lagged behind peers, who had already been coding for years. In part due to Aaronson getting into advanced mathematics before getting into computer programming, he felt drawn to theoretical computing, particularly computational complexity theory. At Cornell, he became interested in quantum computing and devoted himself to computational complexity and quantum computing.[5]
After postdoctorates at the Institute for Advanced Study and the University of Waterloo, he took a faculty position at MIT in 2007.[6] His primary area of research is quantum computing and computational complexity theory more generally.
In the summer of 2016 he moved from MIT to the University of Texas at Austin as David J. Bruton Jr. Centennial Professor of Computer Science and as the founding director of UT Austin's new Quantum Information Center.[8] In summer 2022 he announced he would be working for a year at OpenAI on theoretical foundations of AI safety.[9] [10]
He is a founder of the Complexity Zoo wiki, which catalogs all classes of computational complexity.[19] [20] He is the author of the blog "Shtetl-Optimized".[21]
In the interview to Scientific American he answers why his blog is called shtetl-optimized, and about his preoccupation to the past:
He also wrote the essay "Who Can Name The Bigger Number?".[22] The latter work, widely distributed in academic computer science, uses the concept of Busy Beaver Numbers as described by Tibor Radó to illustrate the limits of computability in a pedagogic environment.
He has also taught a graduate-level survey course, "Quantum Computing Since Democritus",[23] for which notes are available online, and have been published as a book by Cambridge University Press.[24] It weaves together disparate topics into a cohesive whole, including quantum mechanics, complexity, free will, time travel, the anthropic principle and more. Many of these interdisciplinary applications of computational complexity were later fleshed out in his article, "Why Philosophers Should Care About Computational Complexity".[25] Since then, Aaronson published a book entitled Quantum Computing Since Democritus based on the course.
An article of Aaronson's, "The Limits of Quantum Computers", was published in Scientific American,[26] and he was a guest speaker at the 2007 Foundational Questions in Science Institute conference.[27] Aaronson is frequently cited in the non-academic press, such as Science News,[28] The Age,[29] ZDNet,[30] Slashdot,[31] New Scientist,[32] The New York Times,[33] and Forbes magazine.[34]