Raimund Seidel

Computer Scientist, Person

23

Who is Raimund Seidel?

Raimund G. Seidel is a professor of computer science at the Universität des Saarlandes and an expert in computational geometry.

Seidel was born in Graz, Austria, and studied with Hermann Maurer at the Graz University of Technology. He received his Ph.D. in 1987 from Cornell University under the supervision of John Gilbert. After teaching at the University of California, Berkeley, he moved in 1994 to Saarland. In 1997 he and Christoph M. Hoffmann were program chairs for the ACM Symposium on Computational Geometry.

Seidel invented backwards analysis of randomized algorithms and used it to analyze a simple linear programming algorithm that runs in linear time for problems of bounded dimension. With his student Cecilia R. Aragon in 1989 he devised the treap data structure, and he is also known for the Kirkpatrick–Seidel algorithm for computing two-dimensional convex hulls.

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Profession
Education
  • Cornell University

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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