James R. Jackson

James Richard "Jim" Jackson (May 16, 1924 – March 20, 2011) was an American mathematician, well known for his contribution to queueing theory.

[2] He served in the United States Air Force during World War II.

[1] All of these degrees were from UCLA where Jackson remained in the School of Management for his career until his retirement in 1985.

[3] While at University of California, Los Angeles he developed the Jackson's theorem and some of the first models that could predict the performance of networks with several nodes.

Jackson's work was inspired by his experience in the Los Angeles aircraft industry,[4] but the results found applications in the design of computers, manufacturing and the then emerging packet switched networks, such as those undertaken by Leonard Kleinrock in 1961.