Milner Award

European computer science award From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Royal Society Milner Award, formally the Royal Society Milner Award and Lecture, is awarded annually by the Royal Society, a London-based learned society, for "outstanding achievement in computer science by a European researcher". The award is supported by Microsoft Research and is named in honour of Robin Milner, a prolific pioneer in computer science[1] who, among other contributions, designed LCF and the programming language ML.[2]

Quick Facts Royal Society Milner Award and Lecture, Awarded for ...
Royal Society Milner Award and Lecture
Awarded for"outstanding achievement in computer science by a European researcher"
Presented byThe Royal Society
Reward(s)£5,000
First award2012 (2012)
WebsiteMilner Award and Lecture
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Recipients should be active researchers in computer science who are either European or have resided in Europe for at least 12 months prior to their nomination. Winners receive a bronze medal and a personal prize of £5,000 and are invited to deliver a public lecture on their research at the Society. The Council of the Royal Society chooses recipients on the recommendation of the Milner Award Committee. The committee is made up of Fellows of the Royal Society, Members of the Académie des sciences (France), and Members of Leopoldina (Germany).[1]

Preceding the Milner Award was the Royal Society and Académie des sciences Microsoft Award, which rewarded scientists in Europe for advancements in science using computational methods. It lasted from 2006 to 2009 until it was replaced by the current award.[3] The ACM SIGPLAN Robin Milner Young Researcher Award is a similar award rewarded for "outstanding contributions by young investigators in the area of programming languages".[4]

Recipients

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Perspective

The inaugural winner Gordon Plotkin received his prize in 2012[5] but delivered his public lecture in 2013,[6] the same year as Serge Abiteboul. In 2018, Marta Kwiatkowska became the first female recipient of the award.[7] Although the 2019 recipient Eugene Myers is American, he moved to Dresden, Germany, in 2012 to become a director of the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics,[8] thus meeting the criteria for a researcher who is European or has lived in Europe for at least 12 months. Due to infection control measures taken because of the COVID-19 pandemic,[9] the 2020 lecture was held as a Zoom webinar.[10]

More information Year, Image ...
Milner Award winners
Year Image Recipient Nationality Rationale Ref
2012 Thumb Gordon Plotkin British "for his fundamental research into programming semantics with lasting impact on both the principles and design of programming languages" [11]
2013 Thumb Serge Abiteboul French "for his world leading database research with significant scientific and industrial impact" [12]
2014
Bernhard Schölkopf German "for being a pioneer in machine learning whose work defined the field of 'kernel machines' which are widely used in all areas of science and industry" [13]
2015 Thumb Thomas Henzinger Austrian "for his fundamental advances in the theory and practice of formal verification and synthesis of reactive, real-time, and hybrid computer systems" [14]
2016 Thumb Xavier Leroy French "for his exceptional achievements in computer programming which includes the design and implementation of the OCaml programming language" [15]
2017
Andrew Zisserman British "for his work on computational theory and commercial systems for geometrical images and as a pioneer in machine learning for vision" [16]
2018 Thumb Marta Kwiatkowska Polish "for her contribution to the theoretical and practical development of stochastic and quantitative model checking" [17]
2019 Thumb Eugene Myers American "for his development of computational techniques that have brought genome sequencing into everyday use, underpinned key biological sequencing tools, and made large scale analysis of biological images practical" [18]
2020
Cordelia Schmid French "for her work in computer vision and her fundamental contributions to the representation of images and videos for visual recognition" [19]
2021 Thumb Zoubin Ghahramani British / Iranian "for his fundamental contributions to probabilistic machine learning" [20]
2022
Yvonne Rogers British "for contributions to Human-Computer Interaction and the design of human-centred technology" [21]
2023 Thumb Stéphane Mallat French "for his key advances in the fundamental principles of wavelets, including theory for audio, image and video processing, his entrepreneurship, and for contributing significantly to advancing the understanding of deep neural networks" [22]
2024 Thumb Artur Ekert British / Polish "for his pioneering contributions to quantum communication and computation, which transformed the field of quantum information science from a niche academic activity into a vibrant interdisciplinary field of industrial relevance" [23]
2024 Thumb Iryna Gurevych Ukrainian / German "for her major contributions to natural language processing (NLP) and artificial intelligence that combine deep understanding of human language and cognitive faculty with the latest paradigms in machine learning" [24]
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