Johann Makowsky

Johann (János) A. Makowsky (born March 12, 1948 in Budapest) is a Hungarian born and naturalized Swiss mathematician who works in mathematical logic and the logical foundations of computer science and combinatorics. He studied at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology from 1967-73. He was a student in Zürich of E. Specker and H. Läuchli[1] in mathematical logic, (Diploma in Mathematics and Physics 1971, Dr. math.sc. in 1974), of B. Eckmann (Topology and Geometry) and V. Strassen (Algorithmics), and in Warsaw of A. Mostowski and W. Marek, where he spent 1972 as an exchange student. Makowsky held visiting positions at Banach Center in Warsaw (Poland), Stanford University (USA), Simon Fraser University (Canada), University of Florence (Italy), MIT (USA), Lausanne University and ETH Zurich (Switzerland). He held regular positions at the Free University of Berlin and the Technion - Israel Institute of Technology (Haifa, Israel) where he was a full professor.[2]

Johann A. Makowsky
Born (1948-03-12) March 12, 1948
Hungary
NationalitySwitzerland
Alma materSwiss Federal Institute of Technology
Known forStudies in model theory, database theory, logic programming, graph algorithms, graph polynomials
Scientific career
FieldsMathematical logic, Computer science
InstitutionsTechnion-Israel Institute of Technology
Doctoral advisorErnst Specker, Hans Läuchli

Among his various contributions it is worth mentioning:

  • In model theory, the solution of two open problems in categoricity theory and his study of logics with various interpolation and compactness properties (partially with S. Shelah and J. Stavi).
  • In database theory, the first undecidability result of the consequence problem for database dependencies (with A. Chandra and H. Lewis), his work unifying the Entity-Relationship model and the relational model of databases (with V. Markowitz), and his work on Boyce Codd Normal Form (with E.V. Ravve).
  • In logic programming, his fundamental studies of Horn formulas and their complexity (partially with B. Mahr and A. Itai)
  • In graph algorithms, his unifying approach to tree-width and clique-width via model theory, leading to a general theory of graph polynomials and their definability in various logical formalisms (partially with I. Averbouch, B. Courcelle, B. Godlin, T. Kotek, U. Rotics and B. Zilber).

Makowsky was a founding member of the European Association of Computer Science Logic in 1992, its vice-president (2002-2004) and president (2004-2009), and was a member of EACSL's executive council till 2014.[3] During his presidency he established the EACSL Ackermann Award for outstanding PhD theses in computer science logic. In 2008, an event dedicated to Makowsky on his 60th birthday was co-located with the annual meeting of the EACSL.[4]

Since 2016 he is a Prof. emeritus at the Faculty of Computer Science at the Technion, and continues his research and teaching and supervising graduate students


References

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