American computer scientist
Adam D. Smith is a computer scientist at Boston University, where he is a founding member of the Faculty of Computing & Data Sciences. His areas of research include cryptography and information privacy. He is known, along with Cynthia Dwork, Frank McSherry, and Kobbi Nissim, as one of the co-inventors of differential privacy, for which he won the 2017 Gödel Prize.[1]
References
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- Adleman, Diffie, Hellman, Merkle, Rivest, Shamir (1996)
- Lempel, Ziv (1997)
- Bryant, Clarke, Emerson, McMillan (1998)
- Sleator, Tarjan (1999)
- Karmarkar (2000)
- Myers (2001)
- Franaszek (2002)
- Miller, Rabin, Solovay, Strassen (2003)
- Freund, Schapire (2004)
- Holzmann, Kurshan, Vardi, Wolper (2005)
- Brayton (2006)
- Buchberger (2007)
- Cortes, Vapnik (2008)
- Bellare, Rogaway (2009)
- Mehlhorn (2010)
- Samet (2011)
- Broder, Charikar, Indyk (2012)
- Blumofe, Leiserson (2013)
- Demmel (2014)
- Luby (2015)
- Fiat, Naor (2016)
- Shenker (2017)
- Pevzner (2018)
- Alon, Gibbons, Matias, Szegedy (2019)
- Azar, Broder, Karlin, Mitzenmacher, Upfal (2020)
- Blum, Dinur, Dwork, McSherry, Nissim, Smith (2021)
- Burrows, Ferragina, Manzini (2022)
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