- Hal
Abelson, artificial intelligence
- Len
Adleman, RSA cryptography, DNA computing, Turing Award (2002)
- Paul
Baran, packet switching
- Dan Bernstein, cryptologist (unconfirmed)
- Manuel
Blum, computational complexity, Turing Award (1995)
- Dan
Bricklin, creator of the original spreadsheet
- Sergei
Brin
- Peter
Elias, information theory
- Robert
Fano, information theory
- Edward
Feigenbaum, artificial intelligence, Turing Award (1994)
- William
F. Friedman, cryptologist
- Eugene
Garfield, library & information scientist
- David
Gelernter, parallel computation, Unabomber victim
- Adele
Goldberg, Smalltalk design team
-
Herman &
Adele Goldstine,
developers of ENIAC
-
Shafi Goldwasser, cryptographer
-
Philip Greenspun, web applications
-
Martin Hellman, public key cryptography
-
Douglas Hofstadter, academic
& author (half Jewish)
-
Bob Kahn, TCP/IP
-
Richard Karp, computational complexity,
Turing Award (1985)
-
John Kemeny, BASIC
-
Leonard Kleinrock, packet switching
-
Joseph Kruskal, Kruskal's algorithm
-
Solomon Kullback, cryptographer
-
Raymond Kurzweil, OCR, speech
recognition
-
Leslie Lamport, LaTeX
-
Jaron Lanier, virtual reality
-
Leonid Levin, computational complexity
-
Herman Lukoff, helped develop
ENIAC and UNIVAC
-
John McCarthy, inventor of the
term "artificial intelligence" (half Jewish)
-
Marvin Minsky, artificial intelligence,
neural nets, Turing Award (1969)
-
John von Neumann, computer scientist,
mathematician & economist
-
Larry Page,
Google
-
David Parnas, software engineering
-
Seymour Papert, LOGO
-
Judea Pearl, Bayesian networks
-
Ken Perlin, fractal noise
- Alan
J. Perlis, compilers, Turing Award (1966)
-
Lawrence Rabiner, digital signal
processing
-
Frank Rosenblatt, perceptrons
-
Azriel Rosenfeld, image analysis
-
Jean E. Sammet, language design
-
Bruce Schneier, cryptographer
-
Herbert Simon, cognitive &
computer scientist, Turing Award (1975)
- Abraham
Sinkov, cryptanalyst
-
Daniel Sleator, splay trees (Jewish
mother)
-
Gustave Solomon, error correction
-
Ray Solomonoff, algorithmic information
theory
-
Richard Stallman, GNU, FSF
-
Gerald Jay Sussman, Scheme
-
Jeffrey D. Ullman, compilers
-
Leslie Valiant, parallel computing
-
Andrew Viterbi, Viterbi algorithm
-
Peter J. Weinberger, awk
-
Joseph
Weizenbaum, ELIZA, artificial intelligence critic
-
Norbert Wiener, cybernetics
- Terry
Winograd, SHRDLU
- Jacob
Wolfowitz, information theory
- Lotfi
Zadeh, fuzzy logic (Jewish mother)
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