Elizabeth Wilmer

Last updated

Elizabeth Lee Wilmer is an American mathematician known for her work on Markov chain mixing times. She is a professor, and former department head, of mathematics at Oberlin College. [1]

As a 16-year-old high school student at Stuyvesant High School and captain of the school mathematics team, Wilmer won second place in the Westinghouse Science Talent Search in 1987, for a project involving 3-coloring of graphs. [2] [3] [4] The first-place winner that year was also female, marking the first year that the top two prizes both went to women. [5] [6] As an undergraduate at Harvard College, she led the university's team [7] that won the first Mathematical Contest in Modeling of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, and she was one of the two inaugural winners of the Alice T. Schafer Prize of the Association for Women in Mathematics for excellence by a woman in undergraduate mathematics. [8] [9] [10] She graduated from Harvard in 1991, and completed her Ph.D. at Harvard in 1999. [1] She worked with Persi Diaconis for her doctoral dissertation, Exact Rates of Convergence for Some Simple Non-Reversible Markov Chains, [11] but after Diaconis moved from Harvard to Stanford in 1997 her official doctoral advisor became Joe Harris. [12]

With David A. Levin and Yuval Peres, Wilmer is the author of the textbook Markov Chains and Mixing Times (American Mathematical Society, 2009; 2nd ed., 2017). [13]

As of September 2022, Wilmer is a rotating program officer at the National Science Foundation in the Probability program. [14]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Persi Diaconis</span> American mathematician and statistician

Persi Warren Diaconis is an American mathematician of Greek descent and former professional magician. He is the Mary V. Sunseri Professor of Statistics and Mathematics at Stanford University.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ronald Graham</span> American mathematician (1935–2020)

Ronald Lewis Graham was an American mathematician credited by the American Mathematical Society as "one of the principal architects of the rapid development worldwide of discrete mathematics in recent years". He was president of both the American Mathematical Society and the Mathematical Association of America, and his honors included the Leroy P. Steele Prize for lifetime achievement and election to the National Academy of Sciences.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Branko Grünbaum</span> Yugoslav American mathematician

Branko Grünbaum was a Croatian-born mathematician of Jewish descent and a professor emeritus at the University of Washington in Seattle. He received his Ph.D. in 1957 from Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Israel.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Yuval Peres</span>

Yuval Peres is a mathematician known for his research in probability theory, ergodic theory, mathematical analysis, theoretical computer science, and in particular for topics such as fractals and Hausdorff measure, random walks, Brownian motion, percolation and Markov chain mixing times. He was born in Israel and obtained his Ph.D. at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1990 under the supervision of Hillel Furstenberg. He was a faculty member at the Hebrew University and the University of California at Berkeley, and a Principal Researcher at Microsoft Research in Redmond, Washington. Peres has been accused of sexual harassment by several female scientists.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Katalin Vesztergombi</span> Hungarian mathematician

Katalin L. Vesztergombi is a Hungarian mathematician known for her contributions to graph theory and discrete geometry. A student of Vera T. Sós and a co-author of Paul Erdős, she is an emeritus associate professor at Eötvös Loránd University and a member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Emily Riehl</span> American mathematician

Emily Riehl is an American mathematician who has contributed to higher category theory and homotopy theory. Much of her work, including her PhD thesis, concerns model structures and more recently the foundations of infinity-categories. She is the author of two textbooks and serves on the editorial boards of three journals.

Jean Estelle Hirsh Rubin was an American mathematician known for her research on the axiom of choice. She worked for many years as a professor of mathematics at Purdue University. Rubin wrote five books: three on the axiom of choice, and two more on more general topics in set theory and mathematical logic.

Ping Zhang is a mathematician specializing in graph theory. She is a professor of mathematics at Western Michigan University and the author of multiple textbooks on graph theory and mathematical proof.

Jeanne A. Nielsen Clelland is an American mathematician specializing in differential geometry and its applications to differential equations. She is a professor of mathematics at the University of Colorado Boulder, and the author of a textbook on moving frames, From Frenet to Cartan: The Method of Moving Frames.

Lynn Margaret Batten was a Canadian-Australian mathematician known for her books about finite geometry and cryptography, and for her research on the classification of malware.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hilary Ockendon</span> British applied mathematician

Hilary Ockendon is a British mathematician who worked at the University of Oxford until retirement in 2008. Her research focuses on applications of mathematics with a particular interest in continuum models for industrial problems. She is an emeritus fellow of Somerville College, Oxford, the former president of the European Consortium for Mathematics in Industry, and the author of multiple books on fluid dynamics. She is an expert on problems in fluid dynamics, such as the reduction of sloshing in coffee cups.

Elizabeth Samantha Meckes (1980–2020) was an American mathematician specializing in probability theory. Her research included work on Stein's method for bounding the distance between probability distributions and on random matrices. She was a professor of mathematics, applied mathematics, and statistics at Case Western Reserve University. She died in December 2020 after a brief battle with cancer.

Ann Natalie Trenk is an American mathematician interested in graph theory and the theory of partially ordered sets, and known for her research on proper distinguishing colorings of graphs and on tolerance graphs. She is the Lewis Atterbury Stimson Professor of Mathematics at Wellesley College.

Anne C. Morel was an American mathematician known for her work in logic, order theory, and algebra. She was the first female full professor of mathematics at the University of Washington.

Clàudia Valls Anglés is a mathematician and an expert in dynamical systems. She is an associate professor in the Instituto Superior Técnico of the University of Lisbon in Portugal.

Yuliya Stepanivna Mishura is a Ukrainian mathematician specializing in probability theory and mathematical finance. She is a professor at the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv.

Margaret Alice Waugh Maxfield was an American mathematician and mathematics book author.

Virginia Ann Clark was an American statistician, professor emeritus of biostatistics at the University of California, Los Angeles, and the coauthor of several books on statistics.

Jane Elizabeth Kister was a British and American mathematical logician and mathematics editor who served for many years as an editor of Mathematical Reviews.

Sarah-Marie Belcastro is an American mathematician and book author. She is an instructor at the Art of Problem Solving Online School and is the director of Bryn Mawr's residential summer program MathILy. Although her doctoral research was in algebraic geometry, she has also worked extensively in topological graph theory. She is known for and has written extensively about mathematical knitting, and has co-edited three books on fiber mathematics. She herself exclusively uses the form "sarah-marie belcastro".

References

  1. 1 2 Elizabeth Wilmer, Professor of Mathematics, Oberlin College, 2016-10-28, archived from the original on 2019-09-23, retrieved 2019-11-23
  2. Verhovek, Sam Howe (March 3, 1987), "Two girls win Westinghouse Competition", The New York Times , archived from the original on November 30, 2018, retrieved November 23, 2019
  3. "Whiz kids believe calculator use could add up to a bad mistake for young students", Los Angeles Times , November 21, 1987
  4. Zaslavsky, Claudia (1993), Multicultural Mathematics: Interdisciplinary Cooperative-learning Activities, Walch Publishing, p. 111, ISBN   9780825121814
  5. Leary, Warren E. (March 2, 1987), Chicago-Area Student Wins Top Prize in Westinghouse Science Contest, Associated Press
  6. Davis, Cynthia J.; West, Kathryn (1996), Women Writers in the United States: A Timeline of Literary, Cultural, and Social History, Oxford University Press, p. 404, ISBN   9780195090536
  7. "The Mathematics Student". 1991.
  8. First Annual Alice T. Schafer Prize, Association for Women in Mathematics, archived from the original on 2016-06-16, retrieved 2019-11-23
  9. Gallian, Joseph A. (June–July 2019), "The First Twenty-Five Winners of the AWM Alice T. Schafer Prize" (PDF), Notices of the American Mathematical Society , 66 (6): 870–874, doi: 10.1090/noti1892 , archived (PDF) from the original on 2019-07-08, retrieved 2019-11-24
  10. Mathematical Education, 1990
  11. Elizabeth Wilmer at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  12. PhD Dissertations, Harvard Department of Mathematics, archived from the original on 2019-04-04, retrieved 2019-11-24
  13. Reviews of Markov Chains and Mixing Times:
  14. "NSF Appoints New Statistics Program Directors". Institute of Mathematical Statistics. March 31, 2023. Retrieved October 15, 2023.