Lotfi A. Zadeh

Founder

Birthday February 4, 1921

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Baku, Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic

DEATH DATE 2017-9-6, Berkeley, California, US (96 years old)

Nationality Azerbaijan

#59596 Most Popular

1921

Lotfi Aliasker Zadeh (Lütfi Rəhim oğlu Ələsgərzadə; ; 4 February 1921 – 6 September 2017) was a mathematician, computer scientist, electrical engineer, artificial intelligence researcher, and professor of computer science at the University of California, Berkeley.

Zadeh is best known for proposing Fuzzy mathematics, consisting of several Fuzzy-related concepts: Fuzzy sets, Fuzzy logic, Fuzzy algorithms, Fuzzy semantics, Fuzzy languages, Fuzzy control, Fuzzy systems, Fuzzy probabilities, Fuzzy events, and Fuzzy information.

Zadeh was a founding member of the Eurasian Academy.

Zadeh was born in Baku, Azerbaijan SSR, as Lotfi Aliaskerzadeh.

His father was Rahim Aleskerzade, an Iranian Muslim Azerbaijani journalist from Ardabil on assignment from Iran, and his mother was Fanya (Feyga ) Korenman, a Jewish pediatrician from Odesa, Ukraine, who was an Iranian citizen.

The Soviet government at this time courted foreign correspondents, and the family lived well while in Baku.

Zadeh attended elementary school for three years there, which he said "had a significant and long-lasting influence on my thinking and my way of looking at things."

1931

In 1931, when Stalin began agricultural collectivization, and Zadeh was ten, his father moved his family back to Tehran, Iran.

Zadeh was enrolled in Alborz High School, a missionary school, where he was educated for the next eight years, and where he met his future wife, Fay (Faina ) Zadeh, who said that he was "deeply influenced" by the "extremely decent, fine, honest and helpful" Presbyterian missionaries from the United States who ran the college.

"To me they represented the best that you could find in the United States – people from the Midwest with strong roots. They were really 'Good Samaritans' – willing to give of themselves for the benefit of others. So this kind of attitude influenced me deeply. It also instilled in me a deep desire to live in the United States."

During this time, Zadeh was awarded several patents.

Zadeh sat for the Iran national university exams and placed third in the nation.

As a student, he ranked first in his class in his first two years.

1942

In 1942, he graduated from the University of Tehran with a degree in electrical engineering, one of only three students in that field to graduate that year, due to the turmoil created by World War II, when the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union invaded Iran.

Over 30,000 American soldiers were based there, and Zadeh worked with his father, who did business with them as a contractor for hardware and building materials.

1943

In 1943, Zadeh decided to leave for the United States to continue his education.

He travelled to Philadelphia by way of Cairo after months of delay waiting first for the proper papers and later for the right ship to appear.

1944

He arrived in mid-1944, lived in New York and worked for an electronic association, and entered the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) as a graduate student in September that year.

While in the United States, he shortened his family name, creating a new middle name from the part he removed, and was thenceforth known as Lotfi Aliasker Zadeh.

1946

He received an MS degree in electrical engineering from MIT in 1946.

1947

In 1947, as his parents had settled in New York City, Zadeh went to work as an engineer at Columbia University.

Zadeh then applied to Columbia University.

Columbia admitted him as a doctoral student and offered him an instructorship as well.

1949

He received his PhD in electrical engineering from Columbia in 1949 and became an assistant professor the next year.

1957

Zadeh taught for ten years at Columbia and was promoted to full professor in 1957.

The chairman of the electronic engineering department at the University of California, wrote and offered him work.

1959

In 1959, Zadeh joined the Electrical Engineering faculty at the University of California, Berkeley.

During his lengthy research career, Zadeh made important scientific contributions in two distinct areas: (1) linear system theory and classical control systems, and (2) Fuzzy sets, Fuzzy logic, and related science and technology.

1963

Zadeh became the Chair of Department of Electrical Engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1963.

One of the lasting impacts of his leadership in this role is the expansion and the integration of computer science.

1965

He published his seminal work on Fuzzy sets in 1965, in which he described the motivation of replicating human-like reasoning and detailed the mathematics of Fuzzy set theory.

1967

Zadeh was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1967 for Natural Sciences in Applied Mathematics.

Zadeh's first important research contribution, well known among scholars of his generation in the electrical engineering community, was in the area of classical control systems.

His pioneer work, co-authored with Charles Desoer, Linear System Theory: The State Space Approach, laid a critical foundation for all modern approaches to system analysis and control.

The second and more well-known contribution of Zadeh's research is his lifelong dedication to the creation, enhancement and the real-world impacts of a broad collection of science and technology based on Fuzzy sets and Fuzzy logic.

1968

He initiated and completed (in 1968) the transformation of the Electrical Engineering department at UC Berkeley to the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS).

This strategic move not only led UC Berkeley's advancement into the top ranks of computer science education and research, but also led other research universities globally to add computer science to their electrical engineering departments.

1973

In 1973 he proposed his theory of Fuzzy logic.

Together, Fuzzy sets and Fuzzy logic provide the necessary foundations for a broad class of related innovations, including (but not limited to):

2003

He was also on the Board of Governors for International Neural Network Society (INNIS) in 2003.