F. Thomson Leighton

Frank Thomson Leighton
Born October 28, 1956
Nationality American
Alma mater Princeton University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Spouse Bonnie Berger
Awards
Scientific career
Fields Applied mathematics
Institutions Akamai Technologies
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Thesis Layouts for the shuffle-exchange graph and lower bound techniques for VLSI (1981)
Doctoral advisor Gary Miller
Doctoral students Peter Shor, Mohammad Hajiaghayi, Robert Kleinberg, Satish Rao

Frank Thomson "Tom" Leighton (born 1956) is the CEO of Akamai Technologies, the company he co-founded with the late Daniel Lewin in 1998. As one of the world's preeminent authorities on algorithms for network applications and cybersecurity, Dr. Leighton discovered a solution to free up web congestion using applied mathematics and distributed computing.

He is on leave as a professor of applied mathematics and a member of the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He received his B.S.E. in Electrical Engineering from Princeton University in 1978, and his Ph.D. in Mathematics from MIT in 1981. His brother David T. Leighton is a full professor at the University of Notre Dame, specializing in transport phenomena. Their father was a U.S. Navy colleague and friend of Admiral Hyman G. Rickover, the father of naval nuclear propulsion and a founder of the Research Science Institute (RSI).

Dr. Leighton has served on numerous government, industry, and academic advisory panels, including the Presidential Informational Technology Advisory Committee (PITAC) and chaired its subcommittee on cybersecurity. He serves on the board of trustees of the Society for Science & the Public (SSP) and of the Center for Excellence in Education (CEE), and he has participated in the Distinguished Lecture Series at CEE's flagship program for high school students, the Research Science Institute (RSI).

Awards and honors

Personal life

He is married to the MIT professor Bonnie Berger, and they have two children.

Books

  • Introduction to Parallel Algorithms and Architectures: Arrays, Trees, Hypercubes (Morgan Kaufmann, 1991), ISBN 1-55860-117-1.
  • Complexity Issues in VLSI: Optimal layouts for the shuffle-exchange graph and other networks, (MIT Press, 1983), ISBN 0-262-12104-2.
  • Mathematics for Computer Science (with Eric Lehman and Albert R. Meyer, 2010)