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Andrew Chi-Chih Yao (Chinese: 姚期智; pinyin: Yáo Qīzhì; born December 24, 1946) is a Chinese computer scientist and computational theorist. He is currently a professor and the dean of Institute for Interdisciplinary Information Sciences (IIIS) at Tsinghua University. Yao used the minimax theorem to prove what is now known as Yao's Principle.
Andrew Yao (姚期智) – 2000 Turing Award recipient, Yao's principle, former professor at Princeton University; Frances Yao (储枫) – computer scientist, researcher in computational geometry and combinatorial algorithms; wife of Andrew Yao; Yuanyuan Zhou – Princeton University PhD, currently UC San Diego
The institute was founded in 2010 by Turing award winner Andrew Yao as a new overarching unit subsuming the Institute for Theoretical Computer Science (ITCS), which had been founded in 2005. [1]
Andrew Yao Chung Laung Liu ( Chinese : 劉炯朗 ; pinyin : Liú Jiǒnglǎng ; 1934 – 7 November 2020), also known as David Liu or C. L. Liu , was a Taiwanese computer scientist . Born in Guangzhou , he spent his childhood in Macau .
Yao (surname), the transliteration of Chinese family names 姚, 銚, and 么; Emperor Yao, a mythical Chinese ruler and emperor; Yao Ming (born 1980), Chinese basketball all-star who played for the Houston Rockets; Euphrasie Kouassi Yao (born 1964), Ivorian politician; Andrew Yao (born 1946), Chinese computational theorist
Yao Chonghua, the name of Emperor Shun of pre-dynastic China, one of the Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors; Yao Chang, founding emperor of the Later Qin Dynasty; Yao Ming, Chinese professional basketball player and humanitarian; Andrew Yao, Chinese computer scientist and A.M. Turing Award laureate; Jianping Yao, Canadian engineer
Li Tao, a general of Yao ethnicity in the People's Liberation Army. The origins of the Yao can be traced back two millennia to Hunan around the Dongting Lake region. According to a Yao tale, the Chinese Emperor Gao Xin was saved from an enemy chieftain by his faithful dog, Pan Hu.
Andrew Yao "In recognition of his fundamental contributions to the theory of computation, including the complexity-based theory of pseudorandom number generation, cryptography, and communication complexity" [78] Stanford University, University of California, Berkeley, Princeton University: 2001 Ole-Johan Dahl —