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Jack Edmonds

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Jack R. Edmonds (April 5, 1934–) is a Canadian mathematician and computer scientist, regarded as one of the most important contributors to the field of combinatorial optimization. He was the recipient of the 1985 John von Neumann Theory Prize.

Research

One of Edmonds' earliest and most notable contributions is the blossom algorithm for constructing maximum matchings on graphs, discovered in 1961[1], and published in 1965[2]. This was the first polynomial-time algorithm for maximum matching in graphs. Its generalization to weighted graphs[3] was a conceptual breakthrough in the usage of linear programming ideas in combinatorial optimization.

Additional landmark work of Edmonds is in the area of matroids. He found a polyhedral description for all spanning trees of a graph, and more generally for all independent sets of a matroid[4]. Building on this, as a novel application of linear programming to discrete mathematics, he proved the matroid intersection theorem, a very general min-max combinatorial theorem[5] which, in modern terms, showed that the matroid intersection problem lay in both NP and co-NP.

Edmonds is well-known for his theorems on max-weight branching algorithms[6] and packing edge-disjoint branchings[7] and his work with Richard Karp on faster flow algorithms. The Edmonds–Gallai decomposition theorem describes finite graphs from the point of view of matchings. He introduced polymatroids[5], submodular flows with Richard Giles[8], and the terms clutter and blocker in the study of hypergraphs[1]. A recurring theme in his work[9] is to seek algorithms whose time complexity is polynomially bounded by their input size and bit-complexity[1] (see the Cobham–Edmonds thesis).

Career

He graduated from George Washington University in 1958 and obtained a Master's degree from the University of Maryland in 1959, his thesis being on the problem of embedding graphs into surfaces (1959).

From 1959 to 1969 he worked at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (then the National Bureau of Standards), being a founding member of Alan Goldman’s newly created Operations Research Section in 1961.

From 1969 on, with the exception of 1991-1993, he held a faculty position at the Department of Combinatorics and Optimization at the University of Waterloo's Faculty of Mathematics. He supervised the doctoral work of a dozen students in this time. From 1991 to 1993, he was involved in a dispute ("the Edmonds affair")[10][11] with the University of Waterloo. The university claimed that a letter he submitted to them was a letter of resignation, but he denied that this was its meaning. The conflict was resolved in 1993, and he returned to the university.

Edmonds retired in 1999. The fifth Aussois Workshop on Combinatorial Optimization in 2001 was dedicated to him.

Personal life

Jack's son Jeff Edmonds is a professor of computer science at York University, and his wife Kathie Cameron is a professor of mathematics at Laurier University.

References

  1. ^ a b c Edmonds, Jack (1991), "A glimpse of heaven", in J.K. Lenstra, A.H.G. Rinnooy Kan, A. Schrijver, ed. (ed.), History of Mathematical Programming --- A Collection of Personal Reminiscences, CWI, Amsterdam and North-Holland, Amsterdam, pp. 32–54 {{citation}}: |editor= has generic name (help); line feed character in |publisher= at position 34 (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  2. ^ Edmonds, Jack (1965). "Paths, trees, and flowers". Canad. J. Math. 17: 449–467. doi:10.4153/CJM-1965-045-4.
  3. ^ Edmonds, Jack (1965). "Maximum matching and a polyhedron with 0,1-vertices". Journal of Research National Bureau of Standards Section B. 69: 125–130.
  4. ^ Edmonds, Jack (1971). "Matroids and the greedy algorithm". Math. Programming (Princeton Symposium Math. Prog. 1967). 1: 127–136.
  5. ^ a b Edmonds, Jack (1970), "Submodular functions, matroids, and certain polyhedra", in R. Guy, H. Hanam, N. Sauer, and J. Schonheim, editors (ed.), Combinatorial structures and their applications (Proc. 1969 Calgary Conference), Gordon and Breach, New York, pp. 69–87 {{citation}}: |editor= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link). Reprinted in M. Jünger et al. (Eds.): Combinatorial Optimization (Edmonds Festschrift), LNCS 2570, pp. 1126, Springer-Verlag, 2003.
  6. ^ Edmonds, Jack (1967). "Optimum Branchings". J. Res. Nat. Bur. Standards. 71B: 233–240.
  7. ^ Edmonds, Jack (1973), "Edge-disjoint branchings", Combinatorial Algorithms (Courant Computer Science Symposium 9, Monterey, California, 1972; R. Rustin, ed.), Algorithmics Press, New York: 91–96
  8. ^ Edmonds, Jack and Giles, Richard (1977), "A min-max relation for submodular functions on graphs", Studies in Integer Programming (Proceedings Workshop on Integer Programming, Bonn, 1975; P.L. Hammer, E.L. Johnson, B.H. Korte, G.L. Nemhauser, eds.), Annals of Discrete Mathematics, 1, North-Holland, Amsterdam: 185–204{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ Christoph Witzgall (2001), "Paths, Trees, and Flowers", A Century of Excellence in Measurements, Standards, and Technology (PDF), National Institute of Standards and Technology, pp. 140–144
  10. ^ CAUT called in on Jack Edmonds case
  11. ^ Editor's introduction, in: Kenneth Westhues, ed., Workplace Mobbing in Academe: Reports from Twenty Universities, Lewiston: NY: The Edwin Mellen Press, 2004

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