Barbara Liskov
Updated: 03/06/2020 by Computer Hope
Name: Barbara Liskov
Born: November 7, 1939, in California
Computer-related contributions
- Computer scientist. One of the first women in the United States to be awarded a Ph.D. from a computer science department (Stanford University, 1968). The topic of her Ph.D. thesis was a computer program to play chess end games.
- Liskov has led many significant projects, including the Venus operating system, a small, low-cost, and interactive timesharing system.
- Helped in the design Argus, the first high-level language to support implementation of distributed programs and to demonstrate the technique of promise pipelining.
- Helped create Thor, an object-oriented database system.
- With Jeannette Wing, she developed a particular definition of subtyping, commonly known as the Liskov substitution principle.
- Leads the Programming Methodology Group at MIT, with a current research focus in Byzantine fault tolerance and distributed computing.
Significant publications
- Program Development in Java: Abstraction, Specification, and Object-Oriented Design.
- Abstraction and Specification in Program Development (MIT Electrical Engineering and Computer Science).
- The Dawn of Software Engineering: from Turing to Dijkstra.
- Author of over a hundred technical papers.
Honors and awards
- IEEE John von Neumann Medal.
- A. M. Turing Award.