Peter W. O'Hearn | |
---|---|
Born |
13 July 1963 (age 54) Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada |
Citizenship | United Kingdom/Canada |
Nationality | British/Canadian |
Fields | Computer science |
Institutions |
Facebook, London, UK University College London, UK Queen Mary, University of London, UK |
Alma mater |
Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada Queen's University, Kingston, Canada |
Doctoral advisor | Robert D. Tennent |
Known for | Separation logic |
Influences | John C. Reynolds |
Peter William O'Hearn (born 13 July 1963 in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada) is a computer scientist based in the United Kingdom.
Peter O'Hearn attained a BSc degree in Computer Science from Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia (1985), followed by MSc (1987) and PhD (1991) degrees from Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada. His dissertation was on Semantics of Non-interference: A natural approach, supervised by Robert D. Tennent.
O'Hearn was an Assistant Professor at Syracuse University, New York, United States, from 1990 to 1995. He was a Reader in Computer Science at Queen Mary, University of London from 1996 to 1999 and then a full professor at Queen Mary until his move to University College London. He has been the recipient of a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award, a Most Influential POPL Paper Award, and a Royal Academy of Engineering/Microsoft Research Chair. In 1997 he was a Visiting Scientist at Carnegie Mellon University and in 2006 he was a Visiting Researcher at Microsoft Research Cambridge.
Following the acquisition of his startup Monoidics, O'Hearn is currently working for Facebook in London.
Most recently he has been co-recipient (with Stephen Brookes, Carnegie Mellon University) of the 2016 Gödel Prize, for the invention of Concurrent Separation Logic.
O'Hearn has made significant contributions to formal methods in general and separation logic in particular.