Barbara Liskov (born Barbara Jane Huberman, 1939) is a computer scientist. She is currently the Ford Professor of Engineering in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science department and an Institute Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She earned her BA in mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley in 1961, and became the first woman in the United States to be awarded a Ph.D. from a computer science department, in 1968 from Stanford University.

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  • Barbara Liskov (born Barbara Jane Huberman, 1939) is a computer scientist. She is currently the Ford Professor of Engineering in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science department and an Institute Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She earned her BA in mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley in 1961, and became the first woman in the United States to be awarded a Ph.D. from a computer science department, in 1968 from Stanford University. The topic of her Ph.D. thesis was a computer program to play chess end games. Barbara Liskov has led many significant projects, including the design and implementation of CLU, the first programming language to support data abstraction; Argus, the first high-level language to support implementation of distributed programs; and Thor, an object-oriented database system. With Jeannette Wing, she developed a particular definition of subtyping, commonly known as the Liskov substitution principle. She leads the Programming Methodology Group at MIT, with a current research focus in Byzantine Fault Tolerance and distributed computing. Professor Liskov is a member of the National Academy of Engineering and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and of the Association for Computing Machinery. In 2004 she won the John von Neumann Medal for "fundamental contributions to programming languages, programming methodology, and distributed systems". She is the author of three books and over a hundred technical papers. (en)
  • Barbara Liskov nee Huberman, Ph.D. (nacida el 7 de noviembre de 1939) es una prominente científica de la computación. Actualmente está trabajando en el departamento de Ingeniería eléctrica y Ciencias de la computación del MIT, como profesora de ingeniería de Ford. Consiguió su graduación en Matemáticas en la Universidad de California, Berkeley en 1961 y años más tarde, en 1968, se convirtió en la primera mujer de los Estados Unidos en conseguir un Doctor Philosophiae en Ciencias de la computación por la Universidad de Stanford. Barbara Liskov ha dirigido varios proyectos significativos, como el diseño e implementación del lenguaje de programación CLU, el primer lenguaje de programación que soportaba la abstracción de datos, Argus, que fue el primer lenguaje de alto nivel en soportar la implementación de programas distribuidos y Thor, un sistema de base de datos orientado a objetos. Junto con Jeannette Wing, desarrolló una particular definición de subtipo, comúnmente conocido como el Principio de substitución de Liskov. La profesora Liskov es miembro de la Academia Nacional de Ingeniería (National Academy of Engineering) de los Estados Unidos. En 2004 ganó la Medalla John von Neumann por Su fundamental contribución a los lenguajes de programación, metodologías de programación y sistemas distribuidos. Además Liskov es autora de 3 libros y cientos de informes técnicos. (es)
  • Barbara Liskov (* 7. November 1939) ist eine US-amerikanische Informatikerin. Sie ist als Professorin für Elektrotechnik und Informatik am MIT tätig. Ihren Bachelor in Mathematik erhielt sie 1961 an der University of California, Berkeley. 1968 erhielt sie an der Stanford University als erste Frau in den USA den Titel eines Ph. D. in Computer Science. Barbara Liskov leitete zahlreiche bedeutende Projekte, darunter den Entwurf und die Implementierung der Programmiersprachen CLU und Argus sowie des objektorientierten Datenbankmanagementsystems Thor. Gemeinsam mit Jeannette Wing entwickelte sie das für die objektorientierte Programmierung bedeutsame Liskovsche Substitutionsprinzip. Liskov ist Mitglied der amerikanischen National Academy of Engineering sowie der American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 2004 erhielt sie die John-von-Neumann-Medaille für „fundamental contributions to programming languages, programming methodology, and distributed systems“ (sinngemäß übersetzt: „Grundlegende Beiträge zu Programmiersprachen, Programmiermethodiken und verteilte Systeme“). (de)
  • Barbara Liskov née Huberman, née le , est une éminente informaticienne. Barbara Liskov a mené de nombreux projets importants, parmi lesquels la conception et l'implémentation du langage CLU, le premier langage de programmation à supporter l'abstraction de données, Argus, le premier langage de haut niveau à supporter l'implémentation de programmes distribués, et Thor, un système de base de données orienté objet. Avec Jeannette Wing, elle développa une définition particulière du sous-typage, connue sous le nom de principe de substitution de Liskov. Barbara Liskov a reçu en 2004 la médaille John von Neumann de l'IEEE pour « ses contributions fondamentales aux langages de programmation, à la méthodologie de la programmation et aux systèmes distribués » (fr)
  • Barbara Liskov, nata Huberman, Ph.D. (7 novembre, 1939) è un'importante scienziata nel campo dell'Informatica. Attualmente è Ford Professor di Ingegneria nel dipartimento di Ingegneria elettronica ed Informatica al Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Nel 1961 ha conseguito il BA in Matematica nella University of California, Berkeley e, nel 1968, presso la Stanford University, è diventata la prima donna negli Stati Uniti a cui è stato conferito il PhD in Informatica. A quel tempo, la maggior parte delle Università non avevano dipartimenti di Informatica e l'Università di Stanford era molto selettiva nel conferire lauree. Barbara Liskov ha condotto molti progetti significativi, tra cui la progettazione e implementazione del CLU, il primo linguaggio di programmazione a supportare l'astrazione dei dati, Argus, il primo linguaggio di alto livello a supportare l'implementazione di programmi distribuiti, e Thor, un sistema di database orientato agli oggetti. Insieme a Jeannette Wing, ha sviluppato una particolare definizione di sottotipo, comunemente conosciuto come il Principio di sostituzione di Liskov. La professoressa Liskov è membro della National Academy of Engineering e della American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Nel 2004 ha vinto la John von Neumann Medal per i "contributi fondamentali ai linguaggi di programmazione, metodologia di programmazione e sistemi distribuiti". È autrice di tre libri e oltre un centinaio documenti tecnici. (it)
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  • 1939-11-07 (xsd:date)
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  • US-amerikanische Informatikerin (de)
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  • Barbara Liskov (born Barbara Jane Huberman, 1939) is a computer scientist. She is currently the Ford Professor of Engineering in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science department and an Institute Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She earned her BA in mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley in 1961, and became the first woman in the United States to be awarded a Ph.D. from a computer science department, in 1968 from Stanford University. (en)
  • Barbara Liskov nee Huberman, Ph.D. (nacida el 7 de noviembre de 1939) es una prominente científica de la computación. Actualmente está trabajando en el departamento de Ingeniería eléctrica y Ciencias de la computación del MIT, como profesora de ingeniería de Ford. (es)
  • Barbara Liskov (* 7. November 1939) ist eine US-amerikanische Informatikerin. Sie ist als Professorin für Elektrotechnik und Informatik am MIT tätig. Ihren Bachelor in Mathematik erhielt sie 1961 an der University of California, Berkeley. 1968 erhielt sie an der Stanford University als erste Frau in den USA den Titel eines Ph. D. in Computer Science. (de)
  • Barbara Liskov née Huberman, née le , est une éminente informaticienne. (fr)
  • Barbara Liskov, nata Huberman, Ph.D. (7 novembre, 1939) è un'importante scienziata nel campo dell'Informatica. Attualmente è Ford Professor di Ingegneria nel dipartimento di Ingegneria elettronica ed Informatica al Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Nel 1961 ha conseguito il BA in Matematica nella University of California, Berkeley e, nel 1968, presso la Stanford University, è diventata la prima donna negli Stati Uniti a cui è stato conferito il PhD in Informatica. (it)
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  • Barbara Liskov (en)
  • Barbara H. Liskov (es)
  • Barbara Liskov (de)
  • Barbara Liskov (fr)
  • Barbara Liskov (it)
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  • Barbara (de)
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  • Barbara Liskov (de)
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  • Liskov (de)
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