LTL2016 Boaz Barak at Harvard: Unlocking the Secrets of 'Unspeakables' in Computer Science đ
Join Harvard's Boaz Barak as he explores the fascinating world of 'unspeakables' in computer science, revealing groundbreaking insights and theories.

Lectures that Last 2016
622 views âĸ Feb 24, 2016

About this video
Boaz Barak: âSpeaking about unspeakablesâ
Boaz Barak is the Gordon McKay professor of Computer Science at Harvard Universityâs John A. Paulson school of Engineering and Applied Sciences. His research interests include all areas of theoretical computer science and in particular cryptography and computational complexity. Previously, he was a principal researcher at Microsoft Research New England, and before that an associate professor (with tenure) at Princeton Universityâs computer science department. Barak has won the Packard and Sloan fellowships, and was also selected for Foreign Policy magazineâs list of 100 leading global thinkers for 2014. He serves on the editorial boards of several journals and is also a member of the Committee for the Advancement of Theoretical Computer Science and of the board of trustees of the Computational Complexity Foundation. He wrote with Sanjeev Arora the textbook âComputational Complexity: A Modern Approachâ.
As part of the One Harvard Initiative, the sixth annual Lectures That Last (LTL2016) event was organized by the Harvard Graduate and Professional Student Government, with support from the Provostâs Office. LTL2016 was a Harvard-wide lecture series featuring student-nominated faculty speakers from each of the 12 graduate and professional schools who presented short TED-Talk style lectures about their work. This yearâs event was held on Saturday, February 6th in Memorial Church (Harvard Yard), with the theme âCrossroads.â For more details and mind-expanding speeches from Harvard professors, visit http://ltl2016.com/.
Boaz Barak is the Gordon McKay professor of Computer Science at Harvard Universityâs John A. Paulson school of Engineering and Applied Sciences. His research interests include all areas of theoretical computer science and in particular cryptography and computational complexity. Previously, he was a principal researcher at Microsoft Research New England, and before that an associate professor (with tenure) at Princeton Universityâs computer science department. Barak has won the Packard and Sloan fellowships, and was also selected for Foreign Policy magazineâs list of 100 leading global thinkers for 2014. He serves on the editorial boards of several journals and is also a member of the Committee for the Advancement of Theoretical Computer Science and of the board of trustees of the Computational Complexity Foundation. He wrote with Sanjeev Arora the textbook âComputational Complexity: A Modern Approachâ.
As part of the One Harvard Initiative, the sixth annual Lectures That Last (LTL2016) event was organized by the Harvard Graduate and Professional Student Government, with support from the Provostâs Office. LTL2016 was a Harvard-wide lecture series featuring student-nominated faculty speakers from each of the 12 graduate and professional schools who presented short TED-Talk style lectures about their work. This yearâs event was held on Saturday, February 6th in Memorial Church (Harvard Yard), with the theme âCrossroads.â For more details and mind-expanding speeches from Harvard professors, visit http://ltl2016.com/.
Tags and Topics
Browse our collection to discover more content in these categories.
Video Information
Views
622
Likes
11
Duration
6:39
Published
Feb 24, 2016
Related Trending Topics
LIVE TRENDSRelated trending topics. Click any trend to explore more videos.
Trending Now