ACM's most prestigious technical award is accompanied by a prize of $100,000. It is given to an individual selected for contributions of a technical nature made to the computing community. The contributions should be of lasting and major technical importance to the computer field. Financial support of the Turing Award is provided by the Intel Corporation.
1966 A.J. Perlis 1967 Maurice V. Wilkes
1968 Richard Hamming 1969 Marvin Minsky
1970 J.H. Wilkinson 1971 John McCarthy 1972 E.W. Dijkstra 1973 Charles W. Bachman 1974 Donald E. Knuth 1975 Allen Newell 1975 Herbert A. Simon 1976 Michael O. Rabin 1976 Dana S. Scott 1977 John Backus 1978 Robert W. Floyd 1979 Kenneth E. Iverson 1980 C. Antony R. Hoare 1981 Edgar F. Codd 1982 Stephen A. Cook 1983 Ken Thompson
1983 Dennis M. Ritchie 1984 Niklaus Wirth 1985 Richard M. Karp 1986 John Hopcroft 1986 Robert Tarjan 1987 John Cocke 1988 Ivan Sutherland 1989 William (Velvel) Kahan 1990 Fernando J. Corbato' 1991 Robin Milner 1992 Butler W. Lampson 1993 Juris Hartmanis 1993 Richard E. Stearns 1994 Edward Feigenbaum 1994 Raj Reddy 1995 Manuel Blum 1996 Amir Pnueli 1997 Douglas Engelbart 1998 James Gray 1999 Frederick P. Brooks, Jr.
2000 Andrew Chi-Chih Yao 2001 Ole-Johan Dahl, Kristen Nygaard 2002 Ronald L. Rivest,Adi Shamir,Leonard M. Adleman
SIAM/ACM Award in Computational Science and Engineering
This endowed award will recognize an individual(s) for outstanding research contributions to the field of computational science and engineering. The contribution(s) for which the award is made must be publicly available and may belong to any aspect of computational science in its broadest sense. The award will include a certificate and a cash prize of $5,000
2002 John B. Bell 2002 Phillip Colella
|