Imre Z. Ruzsa - Curriculum Vitae#


University education, graduation: 1976, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary
Degrees: Candidate of Sciences (equivalent to a Ph. D.) 1979; Doctor of Sciences (D.Sci.), 1990 (both degrees were awarded by the Academy of Sciences)

Elected as a corresponding member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences: 1998; elevated to full membership: 2004.

  • Affiliation: Alfréd Rényi Institute of Mathematics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences (formerly called Mathematical Institute of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences), since 1976.
  • Present position: research professor (equivalent to full professorship) since 1989; head of the Department of Number Theory, since 1991.
  • As a part-time job, also on the faculty of Central European University.

Visiting positions:
  • 1983, three months: University of Bordeaux I (Talence, France)
  • 1983/84 academic year: University of Ulm, Germany, with a stipendium of the Alexander van Humboldt-Stiftung
  • 1985 spring term: University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA
  • 1989 fall term: DIMACS / Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA.
  • 1990, one month: ZiF at the University of Bielefeld (in the workshop on combinatorics).
  • 1992/93, three months: Laboratoire de Mathématiques Discretes, Univ. Marseille (Luminy)
  • 1993, one month: DIMACS / Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA.

Invited speaker at the European Congress of Mathematicians, Stockholm 2004, and at the International Mathematical Congress, Madrid 2006.

Awards:
  • 1971: Kató Rényi Prize 2nd class, János Bolyai Mathematical Society.
  • 1974: Kató Rényi Prize 1st class, János Bolyai Mathematical Society.
  • 1975: G. Grünwald Prize 1st class, János Bolyai Mathematical Society.
  • 1977: "Medal for university studies", the Ministry of Education.
  • 1979: "Junior Prize" of the Academy of Sciences.
  • 1986: Alfréd Rényi Prize, Mathematical Institute of the Academy.
  • 1986: Rollo Davidson Prize, University of Cambridge (England) (jointly with G. J. Székely, for the book: "Algebraic Probability Theory").
  • 1988: Mathematical Prize (Erdõs Prize), Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
  • 1995: Academy Prize, Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

Main subjects of research: connections between number theory and probability, in particular: probabilistic number theory (additive and multiplicative arithmetical functions); probabilistic methods in additive number theory; decomposition of probability measures.

Altogether, about 180 research papers published.
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