Nataša Jonoska (Macedonian: Наташа Јоноска, pronounced [na'taʃa jɔ'noska]; born 1961,[1] also spelled Natasha Jonoska) is a Macedonian mathematician and professor at the University of South Florida known for her work in DNA computing.
[2] Her research is about how biology performs computation, "in particular using formal models such as cellular or other finite types of automata, formal language theory symbolic dynamics, and topological graph theory to describe molecular computation".
[3] She received her bachelor's degree in mathematics and computer science from Ss.
She earned her PhD in mathematics from the State University of New York at Binghamton in 1993 with the dissertation "Synchronizing Representations of Sofic Systems".
[5] She was elected a AAAS Fellow in 2014[6] for advancements in understanding information processing in molecular self-assembly.