Dan Spielman asked me to blog about the Held Prize. I first present what he send me, and then have some thoughts.
FROM DAN:
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Nominations are now being accepted for the National Academy of Sciences’ 2023 Michael and Sheila Held Prize. The Held Prize honors outstanding, innovative, creative, and influential research in the areas of combinatorial and discrete optimization, or related parts of computer science, such as the design and analysis of algorithms and complexity theory. This $100,000 prize is intended to recognize recent work (defined as published within the last eight years). Additional information, including past recipients, eligibility requirements, and more, can be found at here.
All nominations must be submitted online. Unless otherwise stated, the following materials must be submitted:
A letter from the nominator describing the candidate's work and why he or she should be selected for the award. No more than three (3) pages.
Curriculum vitae. No more than two (2) pages (similar to CVs included with NSF proposals).
Bibliography listing no more than twelve (12) of the nominee's most significant publications.
Suggested citation. A 50-word summary stating why the nominee should be considered for this award. (Citation
examples)
Two letters of support. Support letters must be written by individuals from institutions outside both the
nominator's and the nominee’s institution. Up to three letters of support are accepted.
Nominations will be accepted through Monday, October 3, 2022. Please help spread the word that the nomination process is underway.
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BILL COMMENTS
1) The scope seems rather broad (Dan confirmed this in private email) in that its Comb Opt AND Discrete Opt OR related fields like algorithms and complexity theory.
2) The research has to be Outstanding AND Innovative AND creative AND influential. That seems hard to do :-( If they made it an OR instead of an AND I may ask someone to nominate me for my Muffin Work. It does use 0-1 programming!
3) The past winners are, of course, very impressive. But there is one I want to point out to emphasize that the scope is broad: Amit Sahai won in 2022, and here is what the webpage says about it:
For a leading role in development of cryptographic Software Obfuscation and its applications, starting from initial conception of "Indistinguishability Obfuscation" and culminating in new constructions based upon well-founded cryptographic assumptions. These breakthroughs highlight how computational complexity can enable secrecy while computing in insecure environments.
4) Comb Opt and Discrete Opt seem to be Operations Research. So this inspires the following question:
What are the similarities and differences between Operations Research and Research on Algorithms?
I tend to think of Operations Research as being more tied to the real world- but is that true?
5) Not enough 2-letter combinations for what you want to say: I had to use the term Operations Research instead of the abbreviation OR since I was using OR for or. Oh well.
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