Victor Varshavsky
Victor Varshavsky was a Soviet-Israeli computer scientist. His research was concentrated in three areas: threshold logic, probabilistic automata, and asynchronous circuits.
Early years
Due to the Second World War, Varshavsky was evacuated from Leningrad to Barnaul and was there until 1949. In the 9th grade, he was transferred to High School №203 named after Griboyedov in Leningrad.Education
In 1956, Varshavsky graduated from the Leningrad Institute of Precision Mechanics and Optics, majoring in "Firing control devices". In 1962, he defended his PhD dissertation. In threshold logic at the Leningrad Institute of Aviation Instrumentation. In 1969, he defended his DSc dissertation in collective behavior of probabilistic automata at the Academy of Sciences of the USSR. This research was a continuation of what had been done by Varshavsky's DSc advisor Michael Tsetlin.Scientific career
From 1956 to 1960, before getting into PhD study, Varshavsky worked at the Research Institute of the Ministry of Shipbuilding Industry in Leningrad as an engineer and then as a group leader. He started at Design Bureau КБ-4 of the Plant 212, which later was joined with Research Institute НИИ-303. From 1960 to 1980, he worked at the Computing Center of the Leningrad Branch of the Mathematical Institute of the USSR Academy of Sciences as a researcher and then as the Head of Department. This computing center was later reorganized into the Institute of Socio-Economic Problems.In 1978, he was on leave for three months at the laboratory of artificial intelligence at the University of Edinburgh. In 1975, he started to teach at the Department of Computer Engineering at Leningrad Electrotechnical Institute. In 1980, he got the position of Full Professor at the Department of Computer Science. Varshavsky was able to take with him to LETI only a part of his team, namely, and L. Ya. Rosenblum.
In 1988, Varshavsky organized an R&D company, "Trassa", which produced CAD tools for the synthesis and analysis of asynchronous circuits. This company overcame the collapse of the Soviet Union and existed till 1993, when Varshavsky and a little part of his team started to work in Japan. From 1993 to 2000, he was Full Professor and Head of the Computer Logic Design Laboratory at the University of Aizu, Japan. From 2002 to 2003, he was the Head of the department of logical control at Neural Network Technologies, Bnei-Brak, Israel. From 2003 till his death in 2005, he was the Chief Scientific Officer at Advanced Logic Design Company at Kanazawa University, Japan.
From 1965 onwards, Varshavsky was a member of the Commission on the theory of relay devices and finite state machines under the Scientific Council on the Complex Problem of "Cybernetics" of the USSR Academy of Sciences, and since 1985, a member of the Council of the USSR Academy of Sciences on artificial intelligence. For his numerous inventions, some of which have been used for mass production, Varshavsky has been awarded the Honorary Badge “Inventor of the USSR”.
In 1988, he was awarded the VDNH gold medal for the best project in microelectronics.