Matthew Cook
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Matthew Cook (February 7, 1970 - ) is a mathematician and computer scientist who proved Stephen Wolfram's conjecture that the Rule 110 cellular automaton is Turing-complete. Rule 110 is arguably the simplest Turing-complete system currently known.
[edit] Biography
Cook was born in Morgantown, West Virginia and grew up in Evanston, Illinois. His undergraduate studies were at the University of Illinois and the Budapest Semesters in Mathematics program. Throughout the 1980s Cook excelled in mathematics, winning national competitions and qualifying as a member of the six-person US team to the International Mathematical Olympiad. In 1990, Cook went to work for Wolfram Research, makers of the computer algebra system Mathematica. He commenced his doctoral work in Computation and Neural Systems at Caltech in 1999 and received his Ph.D. in 2005.
[edit] Work with Stephen Wolfram
In the 1990s Cook worked as a research assistant to Stephen Wolfram, assisting with work on Wolfram's book, A New Kind of Science. Among other things, he developed a proof showing that the Rule 110 cellular automaton is Turing-complete. Cook's proof of this fact, first conjectured by Wolfram in 1985, has been described as the main technical achievement in Wolfram's book.
Cook presented his proof at the Santa Fe Institute conference CA98 before the publishing of Wolfram's book — an action that led Wolfram Research to accuse Cook of violating his NDA and resulted in the blocking of the publication of the proof in the conference proceedings.
A New Kind of Science was released in 2002 with an outline of the proof. In 2004, Cook published his proof in Wolfram's journal Complex Systems.