Edmund M. Clarke received a B.A. degree in mathematics from the University
of Virginia in 1967, a M.A. degree in mathematics from Duke University in 1968,
and a Ph.D. degree in computer science from Cornell in 1976. He taught at Duke University from 1976-1978
and at Harvard University from 1978-1982. Since 1982 he has been on the faculty
in the Computer Science Department at Carnegie-Mellon University. In 1995 he
became the first recipient of the FORE Systems Professorship, an endowed
chair in the School of Computer Science. He was named a University
Professor in 2008.
Dr. Clarke's interests include
software and hardware verification and automatic theorem proving. In 1981 he
and a graduate student, Allen Emerson, first proposed the use of Model
Checking as a verification technique for finite state concurrent systems.
His research group pioneered the use of Model Checking for hardware and
software verification. In particular, his research group developed Symbolic Model
Checking using BDDs, Bounded Model Checking using fast CNF satisfiability
solvers, and pioneered the use of CounterExample-Guided-Abstraction-Refinement
(CEGAR). In addition, Clarke and his
students developed the first parallel general resolution theorem prover (Parthenon),
and the first theorem prover to be based on a symbolic computation system (Analytica).
Dr. Clarke is one of the founders of
the conference on Computer Aided
Verification (CAV) and served on its steering committee for many years. He
is the former editor-in-chief of Formal Methods in Systems Design. He served on the editorial boards of
Distributed Computing, Logic and Computation, and IEEE Transactions in Software
Engineering. In 1995 he received a Technical Excellence Award from the
Semiconductor Research Corporation. He was a co-recipient of the ACM
Kanellakis Award in 1998. In 1999 he received an Allen Newell
Award for Excellence in Research from the Carnegie Mellon Computer Science
Department. In 2004 he received the IEEE Harry H. Goode Memorial Award.
He was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 2005 for contributions to the formal
verification of hardware and software correctness. He was a co-recipient of the
2007 ACM Turing Award for his role in developing Model Checking
into a highly effective verification technology, widely adopted in the hardware
and software industries. He received the 2008 CADE Herbrand Award
for Distinguished Contributions to Automated Reasoning and a 2010 LICS Test-of-Time Award. In 2011 he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He received an Honorary Doctorate from the Vienna University of Technology in
2012. Dr. Clarke is a Fellow of the ACM
and the IEEE, and a member of Sigma Xi and Phi Beta Kappa.