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2003-2004 Radcliffe
Institute Fellows
Oded Goldreich
Computer Science
Weizmann Institute of Science
Randomness and
Computation
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Photo by Tony Rinaldo
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Oded Goldreich is a professor of computer
science and incumbent of the Meyer W. Weisgal
Professional Chair at the Weizmann Institute of
Science in Israel. His research interests lie
within the theory of computation, specifically in
developing the foundations of cryptography and
investigating the interplay between randomness and
computation.
As part of the research group on randomness and
computation, Goldreich plans to study various
notions of probabilistic proof systems that, in
addition to shedding light on the nature of proofs,
have many applications in cryptography and in the
study of the intrinsic difficulty of certain
important approximation problems. Another area of
intended study during his fellowship year is
pseudorandomness--that is, the study of objects
that look random to any efficient procedure, though
they are not truly random, and the implications of
this study on the possibility of converting certain
randomized procedures into deterministic ones.
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Goldreich received his bachelor's, master's, and
doctoral degrees in computer science at the
Technion, Israel Institute of Technology. He is the
author of the books Modern Cryptography,
Probabilistic Proofs, and Pseudorandomness
(Springer, 1999) and Foundations of
Cryptography (Cambridge University Press, 2001)
and is an editor of the Journal of Cryptology
and SIAM Journal on Computing. He has been an
invited speaker at various conferences, including
the 1994 International Congress of Mathematicians
and the Crypto97 conference, and he is a
corresponding fellow of the Bavarian Academy of
Sciences and Humanities.
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