1. Hans-Joachim Bremermann worked on computer science and evolution, introducing ideas of how mating generates new gene combinations.

1. Hans-Joachim Bremermann worked on computer science and evolution, introducing ideas of how mating generates new gene combinations.
Hans-Joachim Bremermann was born in Bremen, Germany, to Bernard Hans-Joachim Bremermann and Berta Wicke.
Hans-Joachim Bremermann undertook doctoral studies at the University of Munster, completing his Staatsexamen in mathematics and physics in 1951.
Hans-Joachim Bremermann was to become a specialist in complex analysis.
Hans-Joachim Bremermann came to the United States in 1952 and held a research associate position at Stanford University.
Hans-Joachim Bremermann then spent another year researching at Princeton, this time in physics.
Hans-Joachim Bremermann held chairs at Berkeley in mathematics and biophysics.
Hans-Joachim Bremermann continued work in mathematical biology through the 1980s, developing mathematical models of parasites and disease, neural networks, and AIDS epidemiology and pathology.
Hans-Joachim Bremermann retired from the University of California in 1991.
On 16 May 1954, Hans-Joachim Bremermann married Maria Isabel Lopez Perez-Ojeda, a scholar of romance language and literature.