From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Irene Antonia Gargantini (born 1934) is an Italian-Canadian retired computer scientist and numerical analyst, known for her research on root-finding algorithms [A] [B] and quadtrees and octrees, [C] [D] and in particular for introducing the use of hash tables in place of pointer-based structures for representing quadtrees and octrees. [1] In her retirement as a professor emerita at the University of Western Ontario, she has also become a self-published novelist under the pseudonym René Natan. [2]

Early life and education

Gargantini was born in 1934 in Milan, the daughter of a railroad engineer. With the encouragement of her parents, she studied physics at the University of Milan, and after earning a doctorate there, she became a researcher at the university, where her work involved the calculation of electron trajectories in synchrotrons, using a computer from the Computer Research Corporation. [3]

Career and later life

She continued her work on computer-assisted physics calculations at the European Atomic Energy Community beginning in 1958, and at IBM Research in Switzerland beginning in 1965. There, her interests began shifting to the newly established field of numerical analysis. [3]

After seeing an announcement in the Communications of the ACM for a new computer science program at the University of Western Ontario in Canada, headed by John Hart (whose research she had used at IBM), she took a faculty position in the program, beginning in 1968. She became department chair from 1986 to 1991, [3] becoming the first female chair of a computer science department in Canada. [4] She retired in 2000. [3]

Selected publications

Gargantini's research publications include:

A.
Gargantini, Irene; Henrici, Peter (August 1971), "Circular arithmetic and the determination of polynomial zeros", Numerische Mathematik, 18 (4): 305–320, doi: 10.1007/BF01404681, MR  0303707, S2CID  121125347
B.
Gargantini, Irene (1978), "Further applications of circular arithmetic: Schroeder-like algorithms with error bounds for finding zeros of polynomials", SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis, 15 (3): 497–510, doi: 10.1137/0715032, MR  0501848
C.
Gargantini, Irene (1982), "An Effective Way to Represent Quadtrees", Communications of the ACM, 25 (12): 905–910, doi: 10.1145/358728.358741, S2CID  14988647
D.
Gargantini, Irene (1982), "Linear octtres for fast processing of three-dimensional objects", Computer Graphics & Image Processing, 19 (1): 88–89, doi: 10.1016/0146-664X(82)90140-X

References

  1. ^ Morra, Gabriele (2018), "Trees, particles, and boundaries", Pythonic Geodynamics: Implementations for Fast Computing, Lecture Notes in Earth System Sciences, Springer International Publishing, pp. 181–200, doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-55682-6_11; see in particular p. 185
  2. ^ Natan, René (aka Irene Gargantini), Crime Writers of Canada, 13 April 2017, retrieved 2022-12-19
  3. ^ a b c d Gargantini, Irene (May 2014), Coming to Canada: A short autobiography of Dr. Irene Gargantini (PDF), Western University Program in Italian Studies, retrieved 2022-12-19
  4. ^ "2020 IEEE Canadian Foundation Gargantini-Strybosch Scholarship Inaugural Award Given to Omer Abubaker, University of Ottawa" (PDF), IEEE Canadian Review, IEEE, p. 7, Spring 2021, retrieved 2022-12-19

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Irene Antonia Gargantini (born 1934) is an Italian-Canadian retired computer scientist and numerical analyst, known for her research on root-finding algorithms [A] [B] and quadtrees and octrees, [C] [D] and in particular for introducing the use of hash tables in place of pointer-based structures for representing quadtrees and octrees. [1] In her retirement as a professor emerita at the University of Western Ontario, she has also become a self-published novelist under the pseudonym René Natan. [2]

Early life and education

Gargantini was born in 1934 in Milan, the daughter of a railroad engineer. With the encouragement of her parents, she studied physics at the University of Milan, and after earning a doctorate there, she became a researcher at the university, where her work involved the calculation of electron trajectories in synchrotrons, using a computer from the Computer Research Corporation. [3]

Career and later life

She continued her work on computer-assisted physics calculations at the European Atomic Energy Community beginning in 1958, and at IBM Research in Switzerland beginning in 1965. There, her interests began shifting to the newly established field of numerical analysis. [3]

After seeing an announcement in the Communications of the ACM for a new computer science program at the University of Western Ontario in Canada, headed by John Hart (whose research she had used at IBM), she took a faculty position in the program, beginning in 1968. She became department chair from 1986 to 1991, [3] becoming the first female chair of a computer science department in Canada. [4] She retired in 2000. [3]

Selected publications

Gargantini's research publications include:

A.
Gargantini, Irene; Henrici, Peter (August 1971), "Circular arithmetic and the determination of polynomial zeros", Numerische Mathematik, 18 (4): 305–320, doi: 10.1007/BF01404681, MR  0303707, S2CID  121125347
B.
Gargantini, Irene (1978), "Further applications of circular arithmetic: Schroeder-like algorithms with error bounds for finding zeros of polynomials", SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis, 15 (3): 497–510, doi: 10.1137/0715032, MR  0501848
C.
Gargantini, Irene (1982), "An Effective Way to Represent Quadtrees", Communications of the ACM, 25 (12): 905–910, doi: 10.1145/358728.358741, S2CID  14988647
D.
Gargantini, Irene (1982), "Linear octtres for fast processing of three-dimensional objects", Computer Graphics & Image Processing, 19 (1): 88–89, doi: 10.1016/0146-664X(82)90140-X

References

  1. ^ Morra, Gabriele (2018), "Trees, particles, and boundaries", Pythonic Geodynamics: Implementations for Fast Computing, Lecture Notes in Earth System Sciences, Springer International Publishing, pp. 181–200, doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-55682-6_11; see in particular p. 185
  2. ^ Natan, René (aka Irene Gargantini), Crime Writers of Canada, 13 April 2017, retrieved 2022-12-19
  3. ^ a b c d Gargantini, Irene (May 2014), Coming to Canada: A short autobiography of Dr. Irene Gargantini (PDF), Western University Program in Italian Studies, retrieved 2022-12-19
  4. ^ "2020 IEEE Canadian Foundation Gargantini-Strybosch Scholarship Inaugural Award Given to Omer Abubaker, University of Ottawa" (PDF), IEEE Canadian Review, IEEE, p. 7, Spring 2021, retrieved 2022-12-19

External links


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