He received a bachelor of arts in 1952, master of science in 1953 and Ph.D. in 1957 all in mathematics from the Courant Institute at New York University.
His doctoral thesis The Asymptotic Theory of Solutions of U + (K2)U = 0 was advised by Joseph Keller.
Upon graduating from New York University, he worked for the mathematics department at Bell Labs (1956–1958) before joining IBM Research (1961).
Miranker's work[1] includes articles and books on stiff differential equations,[2] interval arithmetic,[3] analog computing, and neural networks and the modeling of consciousness.
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