In 1998, he received the
Sloan Research Fellowship. He was awarded the Rolf
Nevanlinna Prize at the 24th
International Congress of Mathematicians (ICM) in 2002. The prize recognizes outstanding work in the
mathematical aspects of computer science. Sudan was honored for his work in advancing the theory of
probabilistically checkable proofs—a way to recast a mathematical proof in computer language for additional checks on its validity—and developing
error-correcting codes. For the same work, he received the
ACM's Distinguished Doctoral Dissertation Award in 1993 and the
Gödel Prize in 2001 and was an Invited Speaker of the ICM in 1998. He is a Fellow of the ACM (2008). In 2012 he became a fellow of the
American Mathematical Society. In 2014 he won the
Infosys Prize in the mathematical sciences. In 2017 he was elected to the
National Academy of Sciences. In 2021, he was awarded the
IEEE Richard W. Hamming Medal for 2022. Sudan has made important contributions to several areas of theoretical computer science, including probabilistically checkable proofs, non-approximability of
optimization problems,
list decoding, and error-correcting codes. ==References==