Yehoshua Sagiv
Yehoshua Chaim ("Shuky") Sagiv is a computer scientist and professor of computer science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He obtained his PhD at Princeton University in 1978. His advisor was Jeffrey Ullman.
Yehoshua Sagiv | |
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Alma mater | Princeton University |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Computer Science |
Sagiv is one of the founders of the field of relational database theory, and specifically of dependency theory.[1] He also did seminal work in the areas of semi-structured databases[2] and local-as-view data integration.[3]
Currently (2008) he is the most-published author in the ACM Symposium on Principles of Database Systems (with 29 papers published there).[4] He was also the winner of the ACM SIGMOD Test of Time Award in 2002.[5]
References
- David Maier, Alberto O. Mendelzon, Yehoshua Sagiv: Testing Implications of Data Dependencies. ACM Trans. Database Syst. 4(4): 455-469 (1979)
- Hector Garcia-Molina, Yannis Papakonstantinou, Dallan Quass, Anand Rajaraman, Yehoshua Sagiv, Jeffrey D. Ullman, Vasilis Vassalos, Jennifer Widom: The TSIMMIS Approach to Mediation: Data Models and Languages. J. Intell. Inf. Syst. 8(2): 117-132 (1997)
- Alon Y. Levy, Alberto O. Mendelzon, Yehoshua Sagiv, Divesh Srivastava: Answering Queries Using Views. PODS 1995: 95-104
- ACM PODS pages
- SIGMOD awards page
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