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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diego%20Rosa%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201998%29 | Diego Gabriel Rosa Lambach (born 27 August 1998) is a Uruguayan footballer who plays as a midfielder for Uruguay Montevideo in the Uruguayan Primera División.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
1998 births
Living people
Rampla Juniors players
Uruguayan Primera División players
Uruguayan men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Uruguayan Segunda División players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curtis%20L.%20Meinert | Curtis Lynea Meinert (June 30, 1934 – June 13, 2023) was an American clinical trialist. He was a professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Life
Meinert was born on June 30, 1934, on a farm outside Sleepy Eye, Minnesota. His parents were Mabel Eleanor Christensen and Arthur August Edward Meinert. He was raised in rural Minnesota. He completed a B.A. in psychology from the University of Minnesota in 1956. He earned a doctor of philosophy in statistics at University of Minnesota in 1964. His dissertation was titled Quantitation of the isotope displacement of immunoassay of insulin. His advisor was Richard B. McHugh.
Meinert was the head of a clinical trial coordinating center at University of Maryland. Meinert researched randomized clinical trials for AIDS, cardiovascular diseases, and asthma. He was a professor of epidemiology and biostatistics and the inaugural director of the Center for Clinical Trials at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
In 1979, Meinert was elected a fellow of the American College of Epidemiology. In 1995, he was elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He was a 2001 Fellow of the American Heart Association. In 2006, he was elected a fellow of the Society for Clinical Trials. In 2005, Johns Hopkins University established the professorship, Curtis L. Meinert Professor of Clinical Trials.
Meinert married Susan J. Matson on June 22, 1957. They had three daughters. He died on June 13, 2023, at the age of 88.
References
1934 births
2023 deaths
Mathematicians from Minnesota
University of Minnesota College of Liberal Arts alumni
University of Maryland, Baltimore faculty
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health faculty
Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
Biostatisticians
American epidemiologists
20th-century American mathematicians
American statisticians
21st-century American mathematicians
Fellows of the American College of Epidemiology
People from Brown County, Minnesota |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roberto%20Bachi | Roberto Bachi (; 16 January 1909 – 26 November 1995) was an Italian-Israeli statistician and demographer, and founder of the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics. His research focused on the graphical presentation of statistics and the renewal of Jewish demographic studies in the diaspora.
Biography
Roberto Bachi was born to an Italian Jewish family in Rome, the son of Clelia Lampronti and economist . He studied law and statistics at the University of Rome, receiving a Doctor of Laws degree in 1931. He taught statistics at the University of Sassari from 1934 to 1936, and at the University of Genoa from 1936, becoming full professor in 1937. He emigrated to Palestine following the introduction of the Italian racial laws in 1938, where he became an active Mapainik.
Bachi worked as a statistician in the Hadassah Medical Organization (where he founded a Medical Central Bureau of Statistics), and during 1945–47 in the Department of Statistics of the Mandatory Government. He began teaching statistics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in the early 1940s. He studied the issue of sub-replacement fertility the Yishuv and corresponded extensively with major Zionist leaders of the time, conveying comparative data on the Jewish and Arab populations to David Ben-Gurion and others.
After World War II, the Italian Foreign Ministry invited Bachi to resume his post in Genoa, which Bachi declined. By 1945, Bachi had become associate professor of statistics at the Hebrew University, and was promoted to full professor in 1947. He was also appointed Statistician General of Israel with the foundation of the state in 1948, and founded Israel's Central Bureau of Statistics in 1949, which he directed until 1971.
At the same time Bachi was among the founders of the Faculty of Social Sciences of the Hebrew University and served as its first dean from 1953 to 1956. He served as prorector of the Hebrew University in 1959–60. After his retirement in 1977, Bachi concentrated primarily on geostatistics and graphical representation of statistical data. He was awarded the Israel Prize in 1982.
Bachi died on November 26, 1995.
Selected publications
La mobilità della popolazione all'interno delle grandi città europee (Rome, 1933)
Evoluzione demografica dell'ebraismo italiano (Rome, 1939)
Graphical Rational Patterns (Jerusalem, 1968)
Population Trends of World Jewry (Jerusalem, 1976)
The Population of Israel (Jerusalem, 1977)
New Methods of Geostatistical Analysis and Graphical Presentation (New York, 1999)
References
1909 births
1995 deaths
Elected Members of the International Statistical Institute
Fellows of the American Statistical Association
Academic staff of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Israel Prize in demographics recipients
Israeli demographers
Israeli statisticians
Italian emigrants to Israel
Italian emigrants to Mandatory Palestine
20th-century Italian Jews
Members of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities
Sapienza University of Rome alumni
So |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deevan%20Raj | Deevan Raj a/l Siva Balan (born 29 October 1994) is a Malaysian footballer who plays as a midfielder for Malaysia Premier League club Negeri Sembilan.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
1994 births
Living people
Malaysia Super League players
Malaysian men's footballers
Perak F.C. II players
Negeri Sembilan FC players
Melaka United F.C. players
Malaysian people of Indian descent
Men's association football wingers
Men's association football midfielders
Footballers from Perak |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spherical%20Bernstein%27s%20problem | The spherical Bernstein's problem is a possible generalization of the original Bernstein's problem in the field of global differential geometry, first proposed by Shiing-Shen Chern in 1969, and then later in 1970, during his plenary address at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Nice.
The problem
Are the equators in the only smooth embedded minimal hypersurfaces which are topological -dimensional spheres?
Additionally, the spherical Bernstein's problem, while itself a generalization of the original Bernstein's problem, can, too, be generalized further by replacing the ambient space by a simply-connected, compact symmetric space. Some results in this direction are due to Wu-Chung Hsiang and Wu-Yi Hsiang work.
Alternative formulations
Below are two alternative ways to express the problem:
The second formulation
Let the (n − 1) sphere be embedded as a minimal hypersurface in (1). Is it necessarily an equator?
By the Almgren–Calabi theorem, it's true when n = 3 (or n = 2 for the 1st formulation).
Wu-Chung Hsiang proved it for n ∈ {4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 12, 14} (or n ∈ {3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 11, 13}, respectively)
In 1987, Per Tomter proved it for all even n (or all odd n, respectively).
Thus, it only remains unknown for all odd n ≥ 9 (or all even n ≥ 8, respectively)
The third formulation
Is it true that an embedded, minimal hypersphere inside the Euclidean -sphere is
necessarily an equator?
Geometrically, the problem is analogous to the following problem:
Is the local topology at an isolated singular point of a minimal hypersurface necessarily different from that of a disc?
For example, the affirmative answer for spherical Bernstein problem when n = 3 is equivalent to the fact that the local topology at an isolated singular point of any minimal hypersurface in an arbitrary Riemannian 4-manifold must be different from that of a disc.
Further reading
F.J. Almgren, Jr., Some interior regularity theorems for minimal surfaces and an extension of the Bernstein's theorem, Annals of Mathematics, volume 85, number 1 (1966), pp. 277–292
E. Calabi, Minimal immersions of surfaces in euclidean spaces, Journal of Differential Geometry, volume 1 (1967), pp. 111–125
P. Tomter, The spherical Bernstein problem in even dimensions and related problems, Acta Mathematica, volume 158 (1987), pp. 189–212
S.S. Chern, Brief survey of minimal submanifolds, Tagungsbericht (1969), Mathematisches Forschungsinstitut Oberwolfach
S.S. Chern, Differential geometry, its past and its future, Actes du Congrès international des mathématiciens (Nice, 1970), volume 1, pp. 41–53, Gauthier-Villars, (1971)
W.Y. Hsiang, W.T. Hsiang, P. Tomter, On the existence of minimal hyperspheres in compact symmetric spaces, Annales Scientifiques de l'École Normale Supérieure, volume 21 (1988), pp. 287–305
Mathematical problems
Unsolved problems in geometry
Differential geometry |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezanie%20Salleh | Mohamad Ezanie bin Mat Salleh (born 18 April 1995) is a Malaysian professional footballer who plays as a right-back for Sri Pahang.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
1995 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Perak
Malaysian men's footballers
Perak F.C. II players
FELDA United F.C. players
Sri Pahang FC players
Malaysia Super League players
Malaysia Premier League players
Men's association football defenders |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denis%20Bu%C5%A1nja | Denis Bušnja (born 14 April 2000) is a Croatian footballer who plays as a midfielder for Croatian club Rijeka.
Career statistics
Club
Honours
Rijeka
Croatian Cup: 2019
References
External links
2000 births
Living people
Footballers from Varaždin
Men's association football wingers
Croatian men's footballers
Croatia men's youth international footballers
Croatia men's under-21 international footballers
HNK Rijeka players
NK Istra 1961 players
ŠKF Sereď players
NK Bravo players
Croatian Football League players
Slovak First Football League players
Slovenian PrvaLiga players
Croatian expatriate men's footballers
Expatriate men's footballers in Slovakia
Croatian expatriate sportspeople in Slovakia
Expatriate men's footballers in Slovenia
Croatian expatriate sportspeople in Slovenia |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chern%27s%20conjecture%20%28affine%20geometry%29 | Chern's conjecture for affinely flat manifolds was proposed by Shiing-Shen Chern in 1955 in the field of affine geometry. As of 2018, it remains an unsolved mathematical problem.
Chern's conjecture states that the Euler characteristic of a compact affine manifold vanishes.
Details
In case the connection ∇ is the Levi-Civita connection of a Riemannian metric, the Chern–Gauss–Bonnet formula:
implies that the Euler characteristic is zero. However, not all flat torsion-free connections on admit a compatible metric, and therefore, Chern–Weil theory cannot be used in general to write down the Euler class in terms of the curvature.
History
The conjecture is known to hold in several special cases:
when a compact affine manifold is 2-dimensional (as shown by Jean-Paul Benzécri in 1955, and later by John Milnor in 1957)
when a compact affine manifold is complete (i.e., affinely diffeomorphic to a quotient space of the affine space under a proper action of a discrete group of affine transformations, then the conjecture is true; the result is shown by Bertram Kostant and Dennis Sullivan in 1975; the result would also immediately follow from the Auslander conjecture; Kostant and Sullivan showed that a closed manifold with nonzero Euler characteristic can't admit a complete affine structure)
when a compact affine manifold is a higher-rank irreducible locally symmetric manifold (as shown by William Goldman and Morris Hirsch in 1984; they showed that a higher-rank irreducible locally symmetric manifold can never admit an affine structure)
when a compact affine manifold is locally a product of hyperbolic planes (as shown by Michelle Bucher and Tsachik Gelander in 2011)
when a compact affine manifold admits a parallel volume form (i.e., with linear holonomy in SL; it was shown by Bruno Klingler in 2015; this weaker proven case was known as Chern's conjecture for special affine manifolds; a conjecture of Markus predicts this is equivalent to being complete)
when a compact affine manifold is a complex hyperbolic surface (as shown by Hester Pieters in 2016)
Additionally obtained related results:
In 1958, Milnor proved inequalities which completely characterise those oriented rank two bundles over a surface that admit a flat connection
In 1977, Smillie proved that the condition that the connection is torsion-free matters. For each even dimension greater than 2, Smillie constructed closed manifolds with non-zero Euler characteristic that admit a flat connection on their tangent bundle
For flat pseudo-Riemannian manifolds or complex affine manifolds, this follows from the Chern–Gauss–Bonnet theorem.
Also, as proven by M.W. Hirsch and William Thurston in 1975 for incomplete affine manifolds, the conjecture holds if the holonomy group is a finite extension, a free product of amenable groups (however, their result applies to any flat bundles over manifolds).
In 1977, John Smillie produced a manifold with the tangent bundle with nonzero-torsion flat |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gonzalo%20Aguilar | Gonzalo Aguilar Camacho (born 2 August 1987) is a Uruguayan footballer who plays as a defender for Racing Club in the Uruguayan Segunda División.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
Gonzalo Aguilar at playmakerstats.com (English version of ogol.com.br)
1987 births
Living people
Racing Club de Montevideo players
Uruguayan Primera División players
Uruguayan Segunda División players
Uruguayan men's footballers
Men's association football defenders |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gizem%20Karaali | Gizem Karaali is a Professor of Mathematics at Pomona College in Claremont, CA.
Background and education
Mathematician Gizem Karaali is originally from Istanbul, Turkey.
Her father was an electrical engineer and her mother was a professor of nutrition science.
She graduated from UAA (the Üsküdar American Academy) and then went on to Boğaziçi University where she graduated (with honors) in 1997 with undergraduate degrees in electrical engineering and mathematics. Karaali earned her PhD in mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley, in 2004. Her dissertation was "r-Matrices on Lie Superalgebras" and her advisors were Nikolai Jurieviç Reshetikhin and Vera V. Serganova. After a two-year postdoctoral position at the University of California, Santa Barbara, she moved on to Pomona College in 2006.
Career
Karaali's services to the scholarly and mathematical communities include editorship positions for three journals. She is the co-editor, along with Mark Huber, of the Journal of Humanistic Mathematics -- an online, open-access journal that focuses on the connections of mathematics to disciplines in the humanities. She is an Associate Editor for The Mathematical Intelligencer, a journal that offers -- to mathematicians and those outside the field -- articles about mathematics and mathematicians and about the history and culture of mathematics. She also is an Associate Editor for Numeracy -- the open-access, peer-reviewed journal of the National Numeracy Network (NNN). Her Faculty page at Pomona College offers a list of featured and peer reviewed publications and of awarded honors. Her CV includes a more comprehensive list of her activities and publications, including some poetry.
In a personal essay, Karaali has described how teaching an interdisciplinary first-year seminar led her to think about math, writing, and social justice in new ways. Karaali and the mathematician Lily Khadjavi have co-edited two books, Mathematics for Social Justice: Resources for the College Classroom and Mathematics for Social Justice: Focusing on Quantitative Reasoning and Statistics, which provide resources for mathematics instructors who want to add social justice topics to their courses or create new mathematics courses centered around social justice. The books are published by the MAA Press, an imprint of the American Mathematical Society.
Awards and honors
In 2010, Karaali won the Young Investigator Award from the National Security Agency. She stated that she would use the prize winnings to continue her research on Yang-Baxter equations, super quantum groups, and Hopf algebras.
Personal life
Karaali is married to mathematician Stephan Ramon Garcia. Together they have two children.
References
External links
Women mathematicians
Turkish mathematicians
Üsküdar American Academy alumni
Boğaziçi University alumni
University of California, Berkeley alumni
Pomona College faculty
Scientists from Istanbul |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akima%20spline | In applied mathematics, an Akima spline is a type of non-smoothing spline that gives good fits to curves where the second derivative is rapidly varying. The Akima spline was published by Hiroshi Akima in 1970 from Akima's persuit of a cubic spline curve that would appear more natural and smooth, akin to an intuitively hand-drawn curve. The Akima spline has become the algorithm of choice for several computer graphics applications. It's advantage over the cubic spline curve is its stability with respect to outliers.
Method
Given a set of "knot" points , where the are strictly increasing, the Akima spline will go through each of the given points. At those points, its slope, , is a function of the locations of the points through . Specifically, if we define as the slope of the line segment from to , namely
then the spline slopes are defined as the following
weighted average of and ,
If the denominator equals zero, the slope is given as
The first two and the last two points need a special prescription, for example,
The spline is then defined as the piecewise cubic function whose value between and is the unique cubic polynomial ,
where the coefficients of the polynomial are chosen such that the four conditions of continuity of the spline together with its first derivative are satisfied,
which gives
Due to these conditions the Akima spline is a C1 differentiable function, that is, the function itself is continuous and the first derivative is also continuous. However, in general, the second derivative is not necessarily continuous.
An advantage of the Akima spline is due to the fact that it uses only values from neighboring knot points in the construction of the coefficients of the interpolation polynomial between any two knot points. This means that there is no large system of equations to solve and the Akima spline avoids unphysical wiggles in regions where the second derivative in the underlying curve is rapidly changing. A possible disadvantage of the Akima spline is that it has a discontinuous second derivative.
References
External links
Online demo of Akima spline interpolation in TypeScript
Splines (mathematics) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kim%20Tae-hwan%20%28footballer%2C%20born%202000%29 | Kim Tae-hwan (; born 25 March 2000) is a South Korean football defender who plays for Suwon Samsung Bluewings.
Career statistics
Clubs
References
2000 births
Living people
Men's association football defenders
South Korean men's footballers
Suwon Samsung Bluewings players
K League 1 players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Park%20Dae-won | Park Dae-won (; born 25 February 1998) is a South Korean football defender who plays for Suwon Samsung Bluewings.
Career Statistics
Club
References
1998 births
Living people
Men's association football defenders
South Korean men's footballers
Suwon Samsung Bluewings players
K League 1 players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thierry%20Kassi | Kouakou Thierry Mathias Kassi Milosavljević (born 1 March 2000) is a Serbian-Ivorian professional footballer who plays as a forward for ASEC Mimosas.
Career statistics
International
References
2000 births
Living people
Ivorian men's footballers
Ivory Coast men's international footballers
Men's association football forwards
Academie de Foot Amadou Diallo players
AS Tanda players
Issia Wazy players
Ligue 1 (Ivory Coast) players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liu%20Xinyu%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201999%29 | Liu Xinyu (; born 26 August 1999) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for China League One side Sichuan Jiuniu.
Career statistics
Club
References
1999 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Chinese Super League players
China League One players
Beijing Chengfeng F.C. players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cai%20Bingfen | Cai Bingfen () was a Chinese footballer who played as a forward for the China national football team.
Career statistics
International
International goals
Scores and results list China's goal tally first.
References
Chinese men's footballers
China men's international footballers
Men's association football forwards |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pang%20Wah%20Hing | Pang Wah Hing () was a Chinese footballer who played for the China national football team.
Career statistics
International
International goals
Scores and results list China's goal tally first.
References
Chinese men's footballers
China men's international footballers
Men's association football players not categorized by position |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dai%20Linjing | Dai Linjing () was a Chinese footballer who played as a forward for the China national football team.
Career statistics
International
International goals
Scores and results list China's goal tally first.
References
1906 births
1968 deaths
Chinese men's footballers
China men's international footballers
Men's association football forwards
China national football team managers
Chinese football managers
National Chiao Tung University (Shanghai) alumni
Footballers from Zhejiang |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cong%20Zheyu | Cong Zheyu () is a former Chinese footballer who played as a forward for the China national football team. He was the first coach of the China women's football team.
Career statistics
International
International goals
Scores and results list China's goal tally first.
References
1934 births
Living people
Footballers from Dalian
Chinese men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Beijing Guoan F.C. players
China men's international footballers
Chinese football managers
China women's national football team managers |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yau%27s%20conjecture%20on%20the%20first%20eigenvalue | In mathematics, Yau's conjecture on the first eigenvalue is, as of 2018, an unsolved conjecture proposed by Shing-Tung Yau in 1982. It asks:
Is it true that the first eigenvalue for the Laplace–Beltrami operator on an embedded minimal hypersurface of is ?
If true, it will imply that the area of embedded minimal hypersurfaces in will have an upper bound depending only on the genus.
Some possible reformulations are as follows:
The first eigenvalue of every closed embedded minimal hypersurface in the unit sphere (1) is
The first eigenvalue of an embedded compact minimal hypersurface of the standard (n + 1)-sphere with sectional curvature 1 is
If is the unit (n + 1)-sphere with its standard round metric, then the first Laplacian eigenvalue on a closed embedded minimal hypersurface is
The Yau's conjecture is verified for several special cases, but still open in general.
Shiing-Shen Chern conjectured that a closed, minimally immersed hypersurface in (1), whose second fundamental form has constant length, is isoparametric. If true, it would have established the Yau's conjecture for the minimal hypersurface whose second fundamental form has constant length.
A possible generalization of the Yau's conjecture:
Let be a closed minimal submanifold in the unit sphere (1) with dimension of satisfying . Is it true that the first eigenvalue of is ?
Further reading
(Problem 100)
Differential geometry
Conjectures
Unsolved problems in mathematics |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agust%C3%ADn%20Oliveros | Agustín Oliveros Cano (born 17 August 1998) is a Uruguayan professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Liga MX club Necaxa.
Career statistics
International
References
External links
1998 births
Living people
Men's association football defenders
Uruguayan men's footballers
Uruguay men's international footballers
Uruguay men's youth international footballers
Uruguayan Primera División players
Racing Club de Montevideo players
Club Nacional de Football players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perfect%20Bid%3A%20The%20Contestant%20Who%20Knew%20Too%20Much | Perfect Bid: The Contestant Who Knew Too Much is a 2017 American documentary film that profiles Ted Slauson, an elementary school mathematics teacher and super fan of The Price Is Right. Interviews with Slauson reveal how he became fascinated with the show in the early 1970s, which drove him to memorize the prices of products, and his involvement with contestant Terry Kniess, who bid perfectly on a showcase in 2008 and gave no credit to Slauson for his assistance.
Synopsis
Ted Slauson spent his early life documenting and memorizing the prices of the prizes on The Price Is Right. When he turned 18, Slauson started traveling to the show to become a contestant. Even when he was not picked from the audience to be a contestant, Slauson yelled out prices—which is famously allowed—helping contestants win cash and money on the show.
Over many years, Slauson called out prices to contestants, allowing them to submit the exact priceor "perfect bid"on various items, and helped a contestant make a "perfect bid" on the final showcase, helping them win both showcases (a feature of the game), totaling tens of thousands of dollars. Prior to that, he had helped two other contestants bid within a small margin of error on the final showcase, which also allowed them to win both showcases, per a feature of the game.
After helping a third contestant, Terry Kniess, with the "perfect bid" to win the double-showcase of prizes the show's producers finally started increasing and changing the diversity of items used on the show, including changing the options packages that impact the prices on automobiles, which are the highest priced single items available for the contestants to price. This makes it less likely that a contestant can remember the prices by simply watching the show over a long period.
Despite Kniess maintaining that he had come up with the perfect bid on his own, Slauson reveals the truth behind the story that has been misrepresented for years. Ted Slauson is the most known contestant in the history of the show for such accuracy.
Cast
Theodore (Ted) Slauson
Bob Barker
Roger Dobkowitz
While Slauson, Barker and Dobkowitz were expressly interviewed for the film, there is also archive footage of Drew Carey discussing the incident with Kevin Pollak, from an episode of Kevin Pollak's Chat Show.
Critical reception
The film has received positive reviews.
Awards
Perfect Bid: The Contestant Who Knew Too Much won best documentary at the Orlando Film Festival in 2017.
References
Bibliography
External links
2017 films
2017 documentary films
American documentary films
The Price Is Right
2010s English-language films
2010s American films
English-language documentary films |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chern%27s%20conjecture%20for%20hypersurfaces%20in%20spheres | Chern's conjecture for hypersurfaces in spheres, unsolved as of 2018, is a conjecture proposed by Chern in the field of differential geometry. It originates from the Chern's unanswered question:
Consider closed minimal submanifolds immersed in the unit sphere with second fundamental form of constant length whose square is denoted by . Is the set of values for discrete? What is the infimum of these values of ?
The first question, i.e., whether the set of values for σ is discrete, can be reformulated as follows:
Let be a closed minimal submanifold in with the second fundamental form of constant length, denote by the set of all the possible values for the squared length of the second fundamental form of , is a discrete?
Its affirmative hand, more general than the Chern's conjecture for hypersurfaces, sometimes also referred to as the Chern's conjecture and is still, as of 2018, unanswered even with M as a hypersurface (Chern proposed this special case to the Shing-Tung Yau's open problems' list in differential geometry in 1982):
Consider the set of all compact minimal hypersurfaces in with constant scalar curvature. Think of the scalar curvature as a function on this set. Is the image of this function a discrete set of positive numbers?
Formulated alternatively:
Consider closed minimal hypersurfaces with constant scalar curvature . Then for each the set of all possible values for (or equivalently ) is discrete
This became known as the Chern's conjecture for minimal hypersurfaces in spheres (or Chern's conjecture for minimal hypersurfaces in a sphere)
This hypersurface case was later, thanks to progress in isoparametric hypersurfaces' studies, given a new formulation, now known as Chern's conjecture for isoparametric hypersurfaces in spheres (or Chern's conjecture for isoparametric hypersurfaces in a sphere):
Let be a closed, minimally immersed hypersurface of the unit sphere with constant scalar curvature. Then is isoparametric
Here, refers to the (n+1)-dimensional sphere, and n ≥ 2.
In 2008, Zhiqin Lu proposed a conjecture similar to that of Chern, but with taken instead of :
Let be a closed, minimally immersed submanifold in the unit sphere with constant . If , then there is a constant such that
Here, denotes an n-dimensional minimal submanifold; denotes the second largest eigenvalue of the semi-positive symmetric matrix where s () are the shape operators of with respect to a given (local) normal orthonormal frame. is rewritable as .
Another related conjecture was proposed by Robert Bryant (mathematician):
A piece of a minimal hypersphere of with constant scalar curvature is isoparametric of type
Formulated alternatively:
Let be a minimal hypersurface with constant scalar curvature. Then is isoparametric
Chern's conjectures hierarchically
Put hierarchically and formulated in a single style, Chern's conjectures (without conjectures of Lu and Bryant) can look like this:
The first version (minimal hyp |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/33344-33434%20tiling | In geometry of the Euclidean plane, a 33344-33434 tiling is one of two of 20 2-uniform tilings of the Euclidean plane by regular polygons. They contains regular triangle and square faces, arranged in two vertex configuration: 3.3.3.4.4 and 3.3.4.3.4.
The first has triangles in groups of 3 and square in groups of 1 and 2. It has 4 types of faces and 5 types of edges.
The second has triangles in groups of 4, and squares in groups of 2. It has 3 types of face and 6 types of edges.
Geometry
Its two vertex configurations are shared with two 1-uniform tilings:
Circle Packings
These 2-uniform tilings can be used as a circle packings.
In the first 2-uniform tiling (whose dual resembles a key-lock pattern): cyan circles are in contact with 5 other circles (3 cyan, 2 pink), corresponding to the V33.42 planigon, and pink circles are also in contact with 5 other circles (4 cyan, 1 pink), corresponding to the V32.4.3.4 planigon. It is homeomorphic to the ambo operation on the tiling, with the cyan and pink gap polygons corresponding to the cyan and pink circles (mini-vertex configuration polygons; one dimensional duals to the respective planigons). Both images coincide.
In the second 2-uniform tiling (whose dual resembles jagged streams of water): cyan circles are in contact with 5 other circles (2 cyan, 3 pink), corresponding to the V33.42 planigon, and pink circles are also in contact with 5 other circles (3 cyan, 2 pink), corresponding to the V32.4.3.4 planigon. It is homeomorphic to the ambo operation on the tiling, with the cyan and pink gap polygons corresponding to the cyan and pink circles (mini-vertex configuration polygons; one dimensional duals to the respective planigons). Both images coincide.
Dual tilings
The dual tilings have right triangle and kite faces, defined by face configurations: V3.3.3.4.4 and V3.3.4.3.4, and can be seen combining the prismatic pentagonal tiling and Cairo pentagonal tilings.
Notes
References
Keith Critchlow, Order in Space: A design source book, 1970, pp. 62–67
Ghyka, M. The Geometry of Art and Life, (1946), 2nd edition, New York: Dover, 1977. Demiregular tiling #15
pp. 35–43
Sacred Geometry Design Sourcebook: Universal Dimensional Patterns, Bruce Rawles, 1997. pp. 36–37
Introduction to Tessellations, Dale Seymour, Jill Britton, (1989), p.57, Fig 3-24 Tessellations of regular polygons that contain more than one type of vertex point
External links
In Search of Demiregular Tilings, Helmer Aslaksen
n-uniform tilings Brian Galebach, 2-Uniform Tiling 1 of 20
Euclidean plane geometry
Tessellation |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gopshus | Gopshus is a locality in Mora Municipality, Dalarna county in Sweden, with 55 inhabitants in 2010. It is located on the southern shore of Österdalälven, north-west of Mora. In 2010, Statistics Sweden decided that Gopshus would no longer be classified as a village for statistical purposes, as the distance between houses was greater than 150 metres.
The earliest mention of Gopshus is from 1539, in a list of farmers who owed tax-in-kind in the form of squirrel pelts. The documents show that at that time Gopshus was already relatively large and prosperous in terms of how many heads of cattle were owned by local farmers, although not exactly rich.
The ski marathon Vasaloppet passes through Gopshus, and the alpine skiing club Mora Alpina uses a ski slope in Gopshus for training and competitions.
References
Populated places in Mora Municipality |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General%20Authority%20for%20Statistics%20%28Saudi%20Arabia%29 | The General Authority for Statistics (GASTAT) is a government agency in Saudi Arabia responsible for the implementation of statistical works including the conducting of national surveys.
History
The statistical works in Saudi Arabia started early by establishing the Central Department of Statistics and Information in 1960 to be responsible for national statistics and information. In 2015, the Central Department of Statistics and Information was transformed into a public authority called the General Authority for Statistics.
Structure and responsibilities
The authority is governed by a board of directors that is headed by the Minister of Economy and Planning and formed by 15 relevant government entities and private sector institutions.
The responsibilities of the authority were defined by Article 4 of the Council of Ministers’ Resolution No. (11) issued in 2015. These responsibilities include developing the statistical work methodology, preparing and implementing surveys, conducting statistical research and analyzing data and information.
References
Government agencies of Saudi Arabia |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoki%20Ohara | is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a defender for Ococias Kyoto.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
External links
1999 births
Living people
Japanese men's footballers
Japanese expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Singapore Premier League players
Mito HollyHock players
Albirex Niigata Singapore FC players
Ococias Kyoto AC players
Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Singapore
Expatriate men's footballers in Singapore |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firas%20Irwan | Muhd Firas Bin Muhd Irwan (born 1 January 2001), commonly known as Firas Irwan, is a Singaporean footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Albirex Niigata Singapore.
Career statistics
Club
.
Notes
References
2001 births
Living people
Singaporean men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Singapore Premier League players
Woodlands Wellington FC players
Albirex Niigata Singapore FC players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Well-colored%20graph | In graph theory, a subfield of mathematics, a well-colored graph is an undirected graph for which greedy coloring uses the same number of colors regardless of the order in which colors are chosen for its vertices. That is, for these graphs, the chromatic number (minimum number of colors) and Grundy number (maximum number of greedily-chosen colors) are equal.
Examples
The well-colored graphs include the complete graphs and odd-length cycle graphs (the graphs that form the exceptional cases to Brooks' theorem) as well as the complete bipartite graphs and complete multipartite graphs.
The simplest example of a graph that is not well-colored is a four-vertex path.
Coloring the vertices in path order uses two colors, the optimum for this graph.
However, coloring the ends of the path first (using the same color for each end) causes the greedy coloring algorithm to use three colors for this graph.
Because there exists a non-optimal vertex ordering, the path is not well-colored.
Complexity
A graph is well-colored if and only if does not have two vertex orderings for which the greedy coloring algorithm produces different numbers of colors. Therefore, recognizing non-well-colored graphs can be performed within the complexity class NP. On the other hand, a graph has Grundy number or more if and only if the
graph obtained from by adding a -vertex clique is well-colored. Therefore, by a reduction from the Grundy number problem,
it is NP-complete to test whether these two orderings exist.
It follows that it is co-NP-complete to test whether a given graph is well-colored.
Related properties
A graph is hereditarily well-colored if every induced subgraph is well-colored. The hereditarily well-colored graphs are exactly the cographs, the graphs that do not have a four-vertex path as an induced subgraph.
References
Graph coloring
Graph families |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nathan%20Alexander | Nathan Alexander is the James King, Jr. Visiting Professor of Mathematics Teaching at Morehouse College. Alexander is also Associate Director of the James King, Jr. Institute for Student and Faculty Engagement "Communicating by Thinking Effectively in and About Mathematics" (Communicating TEAMs). He is currently on leave from his faculty position as Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Statistics Education at the University of San Francisco.
Education
Alexander grew up in Charlotte, North Carolina, and has worked as a teacher in Harlem.
In college, he worked as a teaching assistant in mathematics, as well as with the Upward Bound program.
Alexander obtained his bachelor's degree at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2007, where he double majored in mathematics and sociology, and his MA in teaching mathematics at New York University. He earned his MS, MPhil, and PhD in mathematics and education at Columbia University, graduating in 2015 under the supervision of Erica N. Walker.
Research and career
Alexander's specialties lie in mathematics education, statistical and mathematical modeling, and social networks and graphs. He has published on developments in teaching for social justice.
In March 2019, Alexander held his student's baby in class, the news of which was tweeted by a student, and was picked up by numerous national and international news media.
Alexander is a Black History Month 2020 Honoree, awarded by Mathematically Gifted & Black.
References
External links
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
Place of birth missing (living people)
Morehouse College faculty
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill alumni
New York University faculty
Teachers College, Columbia University alumni
Mathematicians from North Carolina
21st-century American mathematicians
African-American mathematicians
21st-century African-American people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu%20Rizal%20Maulana | Abu Rizal Maulana (born 27 August 1994) is an Indonesian professional footballer who plays as a defensive midfielder or right-back for Liga 1 club Persita Tangerang.
Career statistics
Club
Honours
Club
Persebaya Surabaya
Liga 2: 2017
East Java Governor Cup: 2020
References
External links
Abu Rizal Maulana at Liga Indonesia
1994 births
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
People from Sampang Regency
Footballers from East Java
Persebaya Surabaya players
Sriwijaya F.C. players
Persiba Balikpapan players
PSM Makassar players
Persita Tangerang players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Men's association football defenders |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivan%20Mitrev | Ivan Mitrev (Bulgarian: Иван Митрев; born 28 May 1999) is a Bulgarian professional footballer who plays as a winger or forward and is currently a free agent.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
1999 births
Living people
Bulgarian men's footballers
Bulgaria men's youth international footballers
PFC CSKA Sofia players
PFC Litex Lovech players
First Professional Football League (Bulgaria) players
Men's association football midfielders
People from Sandanski
Footballers from Blagoevgrad Province
21st-century Bulgarian people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q-value%20%28statistics%29 | In statistical hypothesis testing, specifically multiple hypothesis testing, the q-value in the Storey-Tibshirani procedure provides a means to control the positive false discovery rate (pFDR). Just as the p-value gives the expected false positive rate obtained by rejecting the null hypothesis for any result with an equal or smaller p-value, the q-value gives the expected pFDR obtained by rejecting the null hypothesis for any result with an equal or smaller q-value.
History
In statistics, testing multiple hypotheses simultaneously using methods appropriate for testing single hypotheses tends to yield many false positives: the so-called multiple comparisons problem. For example, assume that one were to test 1,000 null hypotheses, all of which are true, and (as is conventional in single hypothesis testing) to reject null hypotheses with a significance level of 0.05; due to random chance, one would expect 5% of the results to appear significant (P < 0.05), yielding 50 false positives (rejections of the null hypothesis). Since the 1950s, statisticians had been developing methods for multiple comparisons that reduced the number of false positives, such as controlling the family-wise error rate (FWER) using the Bonferroni correction, but these methods also increased the number of false negatives (i.e. reduced the statistical power). In 1995, Yoav Benjamini and Yosef Hochberg proposed controlling the false discovery rate (FDR) as a more statistically powerful alternative to controlling the FWER in multiple hypothesis testing. The pFDR and the q-value were introduced by John D. Storey in 2002 in order to improve upon a limitation of the FDR, namely that the FDR is not defined when there are no positive results.
Definition
Let there be a null hypothesis and an alternative hypothesis . Perform hypothesis tests; let the test statistics be i.i.d. random variables such that . That is, if is true for test (), then follows the null distribution ; while if is true (), then follows the alternative distribution . Let , that is, for each test, is true with probability and is true with probability . Denote the critical region (the values of for which is rejected) at significance level by . Let an experiment yield a value for the test statistic. The q-value of is formally defined as
That is, the q-value is the infimum of the pFDR if is rejected for test statistics with values . Equivalently, the q-value equals
which is the infimum of the probability that is true given that is rejected (the false discovery rate).
Relationship to the p-value
The p-value is defined as
the infimum of the probability that is rejected given that is true (the false positive rate). Comparing the definitions of the p- and q-values, it can be seen that the q-value is the minimum posterior probability that is true.
Interpretation
The q-value can be interpreted as the false discovery rate (FDR): the proportion of false positives among all positive result |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yannick%20Ndzoumou | Yannick Ndzoumou (born 18 May 1996) is a Cameroonian professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Diósgyőri VTK.
Career statistics
References
1996 births
Living people
People from Yaoundé
Cameroonian men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Diósgyőri VTK players
Nemzeti Bajnokság I players
Cameroonian expatriate men's footballers
Expatriate men's footballers in Hungary
Cameroonian expatriate sportspeople in Hungary |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roberto%20Ga%C3%BAcho | Roberto Juceli Weber (born 5 April 1968), commonly known as Roberto Gaúcho, is a retired Brazilian footballer.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
1968 births
Living people
Brazilian men's footballers
Brazilian expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Joinville Esporte Clube players
Grêmio Foot-Ball Porto Alegrense players
Coritiba Foot Ball Club players
Criciúma Esporte Clube players
Esporte Clube Vitória players
CR Vasco da Gama players
Guarani FC players
Cruzeiro Esporte Clube players
Club Atlético Huracán footballers
Miami Fusion players
Campeonato Brasileiro Série A players
Major League Soccer players
Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Argentina
Expatriate men's footballers in Argentina
Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in the United States
Expatriate men's soccer players in the United States
People from Santa Rosa, Rio Grande do Sul |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuri%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201991%29 | Yuri de Jesus Messias (born 11 September 1991), commonly known as Yuri, is a Brazilian footballer who currently plays for Maltese club Marsaxlokk.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
1991 births
Living people
Brazilian men's footballers
Brazilian expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Boavista Sport Club players
Mosta F.C. players
Msida Saint-Joseph F.C. players
Naxxar Lions F.C. players
Nadur Youngsters F.C. players
Al-Jabalain FC players
Valletta F.C. players
Gudja United F.C. players
East Riffa Club players
Saudi First Division League players
Maltese Premier League players
Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Malta
Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Saudi Arabia
Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Bahrain
Expatriate men's footballers in Malta
Expatriate men's footballers in Saudi Arabia
Expatriate men's footballers in Bahrain
Footballers from Rio de Janeiro (city) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nilanjana%20Datta | Nilanjana Datta is an Indian-born British mathematician. She is a Professor in Quantum Information Theory (Grade 11) in the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics at the University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of Pembroke College.
Born in the Indian state of West Bengal, Datta graduated from Jadavpur University with a Master of Science and did a Post-MSc at the Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics. In 1995 she obtained a PhD from ETH Zürich under the supervision of Jürg Fröhlich and Rudolf Morf, working on quantum statistical mechanics and the Quantum Hall effect. She then held postdoctoral positions at the CNRS Marseille, the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, the University of Strathclyde, and the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. In 2001 she became an affiliated lecturer of the Faculty of Mathematics, University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Pembroke College.
After moving to Cambridge, Datta focused her research on the field of quantum information theory, contributing to topics such as quantum state transfer, memory effects in quantum information theory, and one-shot quantum information theory. Her collaborators include Artur Ekert, Jürg Fröhlich, Alexander Holevo, Richard Jozsa, Mary Beth Ruskai, Mark Wilde, and Andreas Winter.
Datta is the founder of the Beyond i.i.d. in Information Theory Conferences series, which started in January 2013 in Cambridge, UK and has continued on an annual basis since then. The main goal of the conference, in which Datta has played a central role, is to bring together the various research communities working on quantum Shannon theory, quantum resource theories, classical information theory, and mathematical physics related to entropies and information, in order to encourage the exchange of research and foster collaborations.
References
External links
Women of Mathematics: an exhibition of portraits (University of Cambridge)
British women mathematicians
Indian women mathematicians
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
Academics of the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies
Women scientists from West Bengal
21st-century British mathematicians
21st-century Indian mathematicians
Fellows of Pembroke College, Cambridge
Cambridge mathematicians
Jadavpur University alumni
ETH Zurich alumni
Quantum information scientists |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bang-Yen%20Chen | Chen Bang-yen is a Taiwan-born mathematician who works mainly on differential geometry and related subjects. He was a University Distinguished Professor of Michigan State University from 1990 to 2012. After 2012 he became University Distinguished professor emeritus.
Biography
Chen Bang-yen (陳邦彦) is a Taiwanese-American mathematician. He received his B.S. from Tamkang University in 1965 and his M.Sc. from National Tsing Hua University in 1967. He obtained his Ph.D. degree from University of Notre Dame in 1970 under the supervision of Tadashi Nagano.
Chen Bang-yen taught at Tamkang University between 1965 and 1968, and at the National Tsing Hua University in the academic year 1967–1968. After his doctoral years (1968-1970) at University of Notre Dame, he joined the faculty at Michigan State University as a research associate from 1970 to 1972, where he became associate professor in 1972, and full professor in 1976. He was presented with the title of University Distinguished Professor in 1990. After 2012 he became University Distinguished Professor Emeritus.
Chen Bang-yen is the author of over 500 works including 12 books, mainly in differential geometry and related subjects. His works have been cited over 35,000 times.
On October 20–21, 2018, at the 1143rd Meeting of the American Mathematical Society held at Ann Arbor, Michigan, one of the Special Sessions was dedicated to Chen Bang-yen's 75th birthday.
The volume 756 in the Contemporary Mathematics series, published by the American Mathematical Society, is dedicated to Chen Bang-yen, and it includes many contributions presented in the Ann Arbor event. The volume is edited by Joeri Van der Veken, Alfonso Carriazo, Ivko Dimitrić, Yun Myung Oh, Bogdan Suceavă, and Luc Vrancken.
Research contributions
Given an almost Hermitian manifold, a totally real submanifold is one for which the tangent space is orthogonal to its image under the almost complex structure. From the algebraic structure of the Gauss equation and the Simons formula, Chen and Koichi Ogiue derived a number of information on submanifolds of complex space forms which are totally real and minimal. By using Shiing-Shen Chern, Manfredo do Carmo, and Shoshichi Kobayashi's estimate of the algebraic terms in the Simons formula, Chen and Ogiue showed that closed submanifolds which are totally real and minimal must be totally geodesic if the second fundamental form is sufficiently small. By using the Codazzi equation and isothermal coordinates, they also obtained rigidity results on two-dimensional closed submanifolds of complex space forms which are totally real.
In 1993, Chen studied submanifolds of space forms, showing that the intrinsic sectional curvature at any point is bounded below in terms of the intrinsic scalar curvature, the length of the mean curvature vector, and the curvature of the space form. In particular, as a consequence of the Gauss equation, given a minimal submanifold of Euclidean space, every sectional curvatu |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benedek%20Varju | Benedek Varju (born 21 May 2001) is a Hungarian professional footballer who plays for MTK Budapest FC.
Club statistics
Updated to games played as of 15 May 2021.
References
2001 births
Living people
Footballers from Győr
Hungarian men's footballers
Hungary men's youth international footballers
Men's association football defenders
MTK Budapest FC players
Dorogi FC footballers
Nemzeti Bajnokság I players
Nemzeti Bajnokság II players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara%20Reys | Barbara Jean Bestgen Reys (born 1953) is an American mathematics educator known for her research in number sense and mental calculation, for her mathematics textbooks, and for her leadership in developing curriculum standards for elementary school mathematics education. She is Curators Professor Emeritus at the University of Missouri, and a winner of the Lifetime Achievement Award of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics.
Education and career
Reys graduated from the College of the Ozarks in 1975. She worked as a high school mathematics teacher in Missouri from 1974 to 1977, as an elementary school demonstration teacher from 1979 to 1982, and as a junior high school mathematics teacher from 1984 to 1985.
Beginning with a master's degree in 1979, she studied mathematics education as a graduate student at the University of Missouri, completing her Ph.D. there in 1985. Her dissertation, supervised by Douglas Arthur Grouws, was Identification and Characterization of Mental Computation Algorithms Used by Seventh and Eighth Grade Students on Visually and Orally Presented Mental Computation Exercises.
In 1985, she joined the faculty of the department of curriculum and instruction (later the department of learning, teaching and curriculum) at the University of Missouri. She was named Lois Knowles Professor in 2006, and Curator's Professor in 2011.
She was president of the Association of Mathematics Teacher Educators from 2009 to 2011.
Recognition
In 2014 the Association of Mathematics Teacher Educators named Reys as their Judith Jacob's Lecturer. In 2016, the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics gave her their Lifetime Achievement Award.
Books
Reys' books include:
Mathematics Curriculum: Issues, Trends, and Future Directions. Seventy-second Yearbook (edited with Robert Reys and Rheta Rubinstein, National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, 2010)
Number Sense: Simple Effective Number Sense Experiences (4 vols., with Alistair McIntosh and Robert E. Reys, Dale Seymour Publications, 1997)
Mental Math (3 vols., with Jack A. Hope, Larry Leutizinger, and Robert E. Reys, Dale Seymour Publications, 1988)
Mathematics Unlimited (with Robert E. Reys and Arnold W. Webb, Holt Rinehart Winston, 1987)
GUESS: Guide to Using Estimation Skills and Strategies (Dale Seymour Publications, 1983)
References
External links
Home page
Living people
20th-century American mathematicians
American women mathematicians
Mathematics educators
College of the Ozarks alumni
University of Missouri alumni
University of Missouri faculty
1953 births
20th-century American women
21st-century American women |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Njego%C5%A1%20Janju%C5%A1evi%C4%87 | Njegoš Janjušević (; born 5 August 1996) is a Serbian professional footballer who plays for Trayal Kruševac.
Career statistics
References
External links
1996 births
Living people
Men's association football defenders
Serbian men's footballers
FK Bežanija players
FK Jedinstvo Užice players
FK Polet Ljubić players
FC DAC 1904 Dunajská Streda players
FK BSK Borča players
FK Loznica players
FK Zlatibor Čajetina players
FC Peremoha Dnipro players
Serbian SuperLiga players
Serbian First League players
Serbian expatriate men's footballers
Serbian expatriate sportspeople in Slovakia
Expatriate men's footballers in Slovakia
Serbian expatriate sportspeople in Ukraine
Expatriate men's footballers in Ukraine
Sportspeople from Prijepolje
Footballers from Zlatibor District |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nemanja%20Peri%C4%87 | Nemanja Perić (; born 16 October 1997) is a Serbian footballer.
Career statistics
References
External links
1997 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Požarevac
Men's association football forwards
Serbian men's footballers
FK Teleoptik players
FK Borac Čačak players
FK Budućnost Dobanovci players
FK Novi Pazar players
Serbian SuperLiga players
Serbian First League players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernesto%20Pascal | Ernesto Pascal (1865–1940) was an Italian mathematician.
Life and work
Pascal graduated in mathematics from the University of Naples in 1887. In the following two years he attended courses in the universities of Pisa and Göttingen; in the last one Pascal studied under Felix Klein who influenced him. From 1890 to 1907 he was teaching at the university of Pavia and in 1907 he returned to the university of Naples were he taught until his death. Here, as Dean of the Faculty of Sciences he reorganised the teaching of mathematics, creating for each professorship a laboratory equipped with models and instruments.
Pascal was remembered for his work on elliptic functions based on Jacobi theta function.
References
Bibliography
External links
1865 births
1940 deaths
19th-century Italian mathematicians
20th-century Italian mathematicians
University of Naples Federico II alumni
Giornale di matematiche editors |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinayak%20Vatsal | Vinayak Vatsal is a Canadian mathematician working in number theory and arithmetic geometry.
Education
Vatsal received his B.Sc. degree in 1992 from Stanford University and a Ph.D. (thesis title: Iwasawa Theory, modular forms and Artin representations) in 1997 from Princeton University under the supervision of Andrew Wiles who had just completed his proof of Fermat's Last Theorem. He then became a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Toronto.
Career and research
Vatsal joined the faculty at the University of British Columbia in 1999 where he still works today.
Vatsal's contributions include his work on the Iwasawa theory of elliptic curves, a field which he approached using novel ideas from ergodic theory.
Vatsal has received numerous accolades. He was a Sloan Fellow in 2002–2004 and a recipient of the André Aisenstadt Prize (2004), the Ribenboim Prize (2006) and the Coxeter–James Prize (2007). In 2008, he was an invited speaker at the 2008 International Congress of Mathematicians in Madrid.
Selected publications
Uniform distribution of Heegner Points, Inventiones Mathematicae, Vol. 148, 2002, pp. 1–48 (Proof of a conjecture of Barry Mazur)
with Ralph Greenberg Iwasawa Invariants of Elliptic Curves, Inventiones Mathematicae, vol 142, 2000, pp. 17–63
Special values of anticyclotomic L-functions, Duke Mathematical Journal, vol. 116, 2003, pp. 219–261
with C. Cornut Nontriviality of Rankin-Selberg L-functions and CM points, in Burns, Kevin Buzzard, Nekovar (eds), L-functions and Galois Representations, Cambridge University Press, 2007, pp. 121–186
with C. Cornut CM points and quaternion algebras, Documenta Mathematica, volume 10, 2005
References
External links
Vinayak Vatsal Homepage at UBC
Living people
Canadian mathematicians
Sloan Research Fellows
Academic staff of the University of British Columbia
Stanford University alumni
Princeton University alumni
1969 births |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pooja%20Sood | Pooja Sood is an Indian curator and art management consultant. She is also the founding member and Director of KHOJ International Artist's Association.
Education
Pooja is a mathematics graduate and has an MBA in Marketing (1984–86) from the Symbiosis Institute of Business Management, Pune. Sood has an MA in Art History (1990–92) from Punjab University, Chandigarh. She also has a certificate in Cultural Policy from the CEU, Budapest (2007); and in Arts Management from the European Summer Academy of ICCM, Salzburg (2000).
Career
Pooja started her career with Delhi-based Eicher Gallery in 1994 where she was the curator and administrator till 1998. During her time with them she curated over 20 exhibitions. In 1997, Sood along with Bharti Kher, Subodh Gupta, Manisha Parekh, Anita Dube and Prithpal S. Ladi founded Khoj International Artists’ Association. From 1998 - 2007, she coordinated the KHOJ International artist's workshops in Delhi (1998-2001), Bangalore (2002 -2003), Mumbai (2005), Kolkata (2006) and Srinagar (2007). From 2000 to 2010, she was the Regional Coordinator of the Triangle Arts Trust, UK where she researched and facilitated the establishment of independent not for profit visual art organizations in Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal called SANA (South Asian Network for the Arts). She was the Curator of the Apeejay Media Gallery from 2002 to 2007. From October 2007- December 2008, she was also the Director of Artists Pension Trust, Mumbai. She was appointed as the artistic director and curator of 48 °C Public.Art.Ecology, a public art project, commissioned by the Goethe Institut in December 2008.
Since 2009, she has been serving as the Director of ARThinkSouthAsia (ATSA), an arts management programme for young managers in the cultural sphere. From November 2015 to February 2019; Sood also served as the Director General of Jawahar Kala Kendra, an arts centre in Jaipur established by the Rajasthan Government. Sood has been on several international juries, like the IAPA award of the Institute of Public Art, Shanghai (2014), the Asia Pacific Breweries Signature prize hosted by the Singapore Art Museum (2014–15) and the Korean Art prize, Seoul (2013).
Sood is currently working on curating the Pune Biennale which is to be held in November–December 2019.
Achievements
Sood was the recipient of a Junior Fellowship from the Human Resource Development (HRD) Ministry, Government of India and developed a Directory of Funding for the Arts in 1998. She is also a Chevening scholar on the Clore Leadership Programme, UK (2009-2011).
Publications
She is the editor of The Khoj Book Of Contemporary Indian Art: 1997- 2007, published by HarperCollins, 2010.
References
Living people
Indian curators
Year of birth missing (living people)
Indian women curators |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fadhil%20Idris | Muhammad Fadhil bin Idris (born 29 July 1996) is a Malaysian professional footballer who plays as a central midfielder for Malaysia Super League club Perak.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
1996 births
Living people
Malaysian men's footballers
Malaysia Premier League players
Malaysia Super League players
Perak F.C. II players
Perak F.C. players
FELDA United F.C. players
Penang F.C. players
Melaka United F.C. players
Men's association football midfielders
Footballers from Perak |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Park%20Min-seo | Park Min-seo (; born 30 June 1998) is a South Korean footballer currently playing as a forward for Chungnam Asan FC.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
1998 births
Living people
South Korean men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
K League 2 players
Asan Mugunghwa FC players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustavo%20Vintecinco | Gustavo Vintecinco (born 2 August 1995) is a Brazilian footballer who currently plays as a forward.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
1995 births
Living people
Brazilian men's footballers
Brazilian expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Esporte Clube Santo André players
Esporte Clube XV de Novembro (Jaú) players
União Agrícola Barbarense Futebol Clube players
Mogi Mirim Esporte Clube players
Sertãozinho Futebol Clube players
Clube Atlético Bragantino players
Ansan Greeners FC players
Busan IPark players
K League 2 players
Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in South Korea
Expatriate men's footballers in South Korea
Footballers from Santo André, São Paulo |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee%20In-gyu | Lee In-gyu (; born 16 January 2000) is a Korean footballer currently playing as a forward for Hwaseong FC of K3 League on loan from FC Seoul.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
External links
2000 births
Living people
People from Gwangmyeong
South Korean men's footballers
South Korea men's youth international footballers
Men's association football forwards
K League 1 players
K3 League players
FC Seoul players
Hwaseong FC players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daiki%20Matsuoka | is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a defensive midfielder for Campeonato Brasileiro Série B club Novorizontino, on loan from Shimizu S-Pulse in the J2 League.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
External links
Profile at Shimizu S-Pulse
2001 births
Living people
Japanese men's footballers
Japan men's youth international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
J1 League players
Campeonato Brasileiro Série B players
Sagan Tosu players
Shimizu S-Pulse players
Grêmio Novorizontino players
Association football people from Kumamoto
Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Brazil
Expatriate men's footballers in Brazil |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keita%20Takahata | is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Oita Trinita of the J1 League.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
External links
2000 births
Living people
Association football people from Ōita Prefecture
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
J1 League players
J3 League players
Oita Trinita players
Gainare Tottori players
Sportspeople from Ōita (city) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiroya%20Matsumoto%20%28footballer%29 | is a Japanese footballer who plays as a defensive midfielder for club Sanfrecce Hiroshima.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
2000 births
Living people
Japanese men's footballers
Japan men's youth international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
J1 League players
J2 League players
Sanfrecce Hiroshima players
Omiya Ardija players
Zweigen Kanazawa players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leung%20Wai%20Fung | Derek Leung Wai Fung (; born 22 December 2000) is a Hong Kong professional footballer who currently plays as a centre back for Hong Kong Premier League club HK U23.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
External links
Living people
2000 births
Hong Kong men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Hong Kong Premier League players
Hong Kong First Division League players
Yuen Long FC players
HK U23 Football Team players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z%C3%A9%20Victor | José Victor de Souza dos Santos (born 8 March 1990), commonly known as Zé Victor, is a Brazilian footballer who currently plays as a midfielder.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
External links
1990 births
Living people
Brazilian men's footballers
Brazilian expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Agremiação Sportiva Arapiraquense players
Rio Branco Sport Club players
Lee Man FC players
Hoi King SA players
Campeonato Brasileiro Série B players
Hong Kong Premier League players
Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Hong Kong
Expatriate men's footballers in Hong Kong |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stefan%20Fi%C4%87ovi%C4%87 | Stefan Fićović (; born 31 May 1998) is a Serbian footballer who plays for Borac Banja Luka, in the Bosnian Premier League.
Career statistics
References
External links
1998 births
Living people
Men's association football midfielders
Serbian men's footballers
FK Borac Čačak players
Serbian First League players
Sportspeople from Mitrovica, Kosovo |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veljko%20Bogi%C4%87evi%C4%87 | Veljko Bogićević (; born 27 April 1999) is a Serbian footballer who played for Borac Čačak.
Career statistics
References
External links
1999 births
Living people
Men's association football forwards
Serbian men's footballers
FK Borac Čačak players
Serbian SuperLiga players
Serbian First League players
Sportspeople from Peja |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikola%20%C5%A0uti%C4%87 | Nikola Šutić (; born 14 April 1999) is a Serbian footballer who plays as a midfielder for Sloga Bajina Bašta.
Career
Ahead of the 2019–20 season, Šutić joined FK BSK Borča.
Career statistics
References
External links
1999 births
Living people
Men's association football midfielders
Serbian men's footballers
FK Borac Čačak players
FK BSK Borča players
Footballers from Čačak
Serbian First League players
FK Tutin players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mateja%20Maslarevi%C4%87 | Mateja Maslarević (; born 12 October 2000) is a Serbian footballer who plays for Metalac GM.
Career statistics
References
External links
2000 births
Footballers from Čačak
Living people
Men's association football goalkeepers
Serbian men's footballers
FK Borac Čačak players
FK Metalac Gornji Milanovac players
Serbian First League players
Serbian SuperLiga players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary%20McCammon | Mary Lister McCammon (23 August 1927 – 11 April 2008) was a British mathematician and professor at Pennsylvania State University. She was the first woman to complete a doctoral degree in mathematics at Imperial College London, which she did in 1953.
Early life and education
McCammon studied mathematics at the University of London, graduating with a bachelor's degree in 1949 and a master's in 1950. She was the first woman to earn a PhD in mathematics at Imperial College London gaining her doctorate in 1953 for her work on mathematical models of viscous flow supervised by D. N. de G. Allen.
Career and research
She joined Massachusetts Institute of Technology for postdoctoral research. McCammon joined Pennsylvania State University in 1954. She introduced classes in numerical analysis, calculus and computer programming. She served as director for undergraduate studies twice, first between 1963 and 1975, and again from 1988 to 1998. McCammon was promoted to Professor in 1992. She created the first mathematics placement test, which were given to all freshmen.
Awards and honours
1982 Christian Mary Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching
1984 Teresa Cohen Service Award
1991 Eberly College of Science Distinguished Service Award
1998 C.I. Knoll Award for Excellence in Teaching
In 2000, Pennsylvania State University announced the Mary Lister McCammon Award, a scholarship for undergraduate studies, as well as the McCammon Award for Distinguished Undergraduate Teaching named in her honour. In 2019, Imperial College London announced the Mary Lister McCammon Summer Research Fellowship for undergraduate women mathematicians.
References
2008 deaths
Women mathematicians
British women mathematicians
Pennsylvania State University alumni
Alumni of the University of London
Alumni of Imperial College London
Year of birth uncertain
1927 births |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sums%20of%20three%20cubes | In the mathematics of sums of powers, it is an open problem to characterize the numbers that can be expressed as a sum of three cubes of integers, allowing both positive and negative cubes in the sum. A necessary condition for an integer to equal such a sum is that cannot equal 4 or 5 modulo 9, because the cubes modulo 9 are 0, 1, and −1, and no three of these numbers can sum to 4 or 5 modulo 9. It is unknown whether this necessary condition is sufficient.
Variations of the problem include sums of non-negative cubes and sums of rational cubes. All integers have a representation as a sum of rational cubes, but it is unknown whether the sums of non-negative cubes form a set with non-zero natural density.
Small cases
A nontrivial representation of 0 as a sum of three cubes would give a counterexample to Fermat's Last Theorem for the exponent three, as one of the three cubes would have the opposite sign as the other two and its negation would equal the sum of the other two. Therefore, by Leonhard Euler's proof of that case of Fermat's last theorem, there are only the trivial solutions
For representations of 1 and 2, there are infinite families of solutions
(discovered by K. Mahler in 1936)
and
(discovered by A.S. Verebrusov in 1908, quoted by L.J. Mordell).
These can be scaled to obtain representations for any cube or any number that is twice a cube. There are also other known representations of 2 that are not given by these infinite families:
However, 1 and 2 are the only numbers with representations that can be parameterized by quartic polynomials as above.
Even in the case of representations of 3, Louis J. Mordell wrote in 1953 "I do not know anything" more than its small solutions
and the fact that each of the three cubed numbers must be equal modulo 9.
Computational results
Since 1955, and starting with the instigation of Mordell, many authors have implemented computational searches for these representations.
used a method of involving lattice reduction to search for all solutions to the Diophantine equation
for positive at most 1000 and for , leaving only 33, 42, 74, 114, 165, 390, 579, 627, 633, 732, 795, 906, 921, and 975 as open problems in 2009 for , and 192, 375, and 600 remain with no primitive solutions (i.e. ). After Timothy Browning covered the problem on Numberphile in 2016, extended these searches to solving the case of 74, with solution
Through these searches, it was discovered that all that are unequal to 4 or 5 modulo 9 have a solution, with at most two exceptions, 33 and 42.
However, in 2019, Andrew Booker settled the case by discovering that
In order to achieve this, Booker exploited an alternative search strategy with running time proportional to rather than to their maximum, an approach originally suggested by Heath-Brown et al. He also found that
and established that there are no solutions for or any of the other unresolved with .
Shortly thereafter, in September 2019, Booker and Andrew Sutherland |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauro%20Silveira | Mauro Santiago Silveira Lacuesta (born 6 May 2000) is a Uruguayan professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Uruguayan Primera División club Montevideo Wanderers.
Career statistics
References
External links
2000 births
Living people
Montevideo Wanderers F.C. players
Uruguayan Primera División players
Uruguayan men's footballers
Uruguay men's youth international footballers
Men's association football goalkeepers
Uruguay men's under-20 international footballers |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucas%20Morales | Lucas Elías Morales Villalba (born 14 February 1994) is a Uruguayan footballer who plays as a defender for Potencia in the Uruguayan Segunda División.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
Profile at Copa Libertadores
1994 births
Living people
Defensor Sporting players
Montevideo Wanderers F.C. players
C.A. Rentistas players
Montevideo City Torque players
Uruguayan Primera División players
Uruguayan men's footballers
Men's association football defenders |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susan%20Martonosi | Susan Elizabeth Martonosi is an American mathematician who works at Harvey Mudd College as the Joseph B. Platt Professor of Mathematics and as the director of the Global Clinic Program at Harvey Mudd. Her research studies operations research, game theory, social networks, and their applications to counter-terrorism, epidemiology, and sports analytics.
Education and career
Martonosi studied operations research and industrial engineering at Cornell University, graduating summa cum laude in 1999. She completed her Ph.D. in operations research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2005. Her dissertation, An Operations Research Approach to Aviation Security, was supervised by Arnold I. Barnett.
She joined Harvey Mudd College as an assistant professor in 2005, and was named Joseph B. Platt Chaired Professor for Teaching Excellence in 2014, while still an associate professor. She was promoted to full professor in 2017.
Martonosi has also been active in the leadership of INFORMS, including terms as chair of the Academic Programs Database Committee and as president of the Forum on Women in OR/MS.
Recognition
In 2012, Martonosi won the Henry L. Alder Award of the Mathematical Association of America, given annually for "distinguished teaching by a beginning college or university mathematics faculty member".
References
External links
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
21st-century American mathematicians
American women mathematicians
Operations researchers
Cornell University alumni
Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni
Harvey Mudd College faculty
21st-century American women |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anwar%20Ibrahim%20%28footballer%29 | Muhammad Anwar bin Ibrahim (born 10 June 1999) is a Malaysian footballer who plays for Kuala Lumpur City as a right-back. He was part of the team that won the 2021 Malaysia Cup.
Career statistics
Club
Honours
Club
Felda United
Malaysia Premier League: 2018
Kuala Lumpur City
Malaysia Cup: 2021
AFC Cup runner-up: 2022
International
Malaysia U-19
AFF U-19 Youth Championship: 2018, runner-up 2017
References
External links
1999 births
Living people
Footballers from Kelantan
Malaysian men's footballers
FELDA United F.C. players
Selangor F.C. players
Kuala Lumpur City F.C. players
Malaysia Premier League players
Malaysia Super League players
Men's association football defenders |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ismaila%20Ousman | Ismaila Ousman (born 16 June 1997) is a Cameroonian professional footballer who plays for Diósgyőri VTK.
Club statistics
Updated to games played as of 9 March 2019.
References
External links
1997 births
Living people
People from Yaoundé
Cameroonian men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Diósgyőri VTK players
Nemzeti Bajnokság I players
Cameroonian expatriate men's footballers
Expatriate men's footballers in Hungary
Cameroonian expatriate sportspeople in Hungary |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asher%20Baer | Asher Baer (; early 19th century, Seiny – 1897, Jerusalem) was a Russian Jewish mathematician and engraver.
He made many important discoveries in mathematics and especially in mechanics. He discovered a method by which the same force causes two different movements of two equal cog-wheels to dovetail with each other. His engravings were awarded a prize at the Königsberg Exhibition of 1858. The German press of that time devoted many articles to Baer's valuable inventions, and Ossip Rabbinovich and O. Wohl in the Russo-Jewish periodicals Razsvyet and Ha-Karmel spoke highly of his talent. In the later part of the 1860s Baer went to Jerusalem, whence he wrote correspondence for many years for Ha-Maggid and other Hebrew periodicals.
References
1897 deaths
19th-century engravers
19th-century mathematicians from the Russian Empire
Emigrants from the Russian Empire to the Ottoman Empire
Jews from the Russian Empire
Journalists from the Russian Empire
Physicists from the Russian Empire
People from Sejny County
Engravers from the Russian Empire |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French%20Statistical%20Society | The French Statistical Society (in French, Société française de statistique, SFdS) is a French learned society founded in 1997 specializing in statistics. Its vocation is to promote the use of statistics, enhance its public understanding, and encourage associated methodological developments.
Actions
Publications
The SFdS publishes several scientific journals:
Journal de la société française de statistique (Journal of the French Statistical Society, J-SFdS), in French and English.
Statistique et Enseignement in French.
Statistique et Société in French.
Case Studies In Business, Industry And Government Statistics (CSBIGS) in collaboration with Bentley University.
Events and outreach
The SFdS organizes every year the journées de statistiques (JdS).
Awards
Prix du Docteur Norbert Marx for contributions in epidepiology, public health or health economics.
Prix Marie-Jeanne Laurent-Duhamel for a PhD thesis from a French speaking statistician.
Prix Pierre-Simon de Laplace awarded every three years to an accomplished French-speaking statistician.
History
The society was founded on August 6, 1997, and was recognized to serve the public benefit by the French administration on December 3, 1998. The SFdS results from the merging of the société de statistique de Paris (SSP), founded in 1860, the association pour la statistique et ses utilisations (ASU), founded in 1969 and the société de statistique de France (SSF) funded in 1976
References
External links
Official website
Journal de la SFdS
Revue Statistique et Enseignement
CSBIGS
Revue Statistique et Société
Organizations established in 1997
Statistical societies |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faiz%20Mazlan | Muhammad Faiz bin Mazlan (born 20 January 1997) is a Malaysian footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder for Malaysia Super League club Penang.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
1997 births
Living people
Malaysian men's footballers
Footballers from Selangor
FELDA United F.C. players
Penang F.C. players
Petaling Jaya City FC players
Kelantan F.C. players
Malaysia Super League players
Men's association football midfielders |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audrey%20Bates%20%28programmer%29 | Margery Audrey Bates (Clayton Wallis) (1928-2014) was a British-American computer programmer who, in 1948, wrote the earliest program for lambda calculus calculations on the Manchester Mark I computer.
Career
Bates graduated with a First in Mathematics from University of Manchester in the summer of 1949. She was taken on as a research student by Alan Turing, and shared an office with him and Cicely Popplewell. In 1950 Bates submitted an MSc thesis entitled "The mechanical solution of a problem in Church's Lambda calculus". This thesis documents a successful attempt to carry out higher-order logical reasoning on the extremely primitive Manchester Mark I electronic computer.
When the Manchester Mark I was commercialised by the local electronics firm Ferranti, Bates moved to work with them as a programmer. Whilst at Ferranti she composed several sections (some uncredited) of Vivian Bowdon's Faster Than Thought, a popular introduction to electronic computing.
In 1952, Bates went to work on the FERUT, the Ferranti Mark I installed at the University of Toronto. In 1955, Bates was pictured supervising the FERUT when it carried out the first automated remote access to a computer.
In 1979, Bates was working as a 'futurist' at a US military think tank.
Personal life
Bates married twice and had four children. Her first husband, Ken Wallis, was a fellow Ferranti programmer; her second husband was Leigh Clayton and it was under the name of Clayton that Bates published her later work.
References
British women computer scientists
Alumni of the University of Manchester
1928 births
2014 deaths |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donegall%20Lectureship%20at%20Trinity%20College%20Dublin | The Donegall Lecturership at Trinity College Dublin, is one of two endowed mathematics positions at Trinity College Dublin (TCD), the other being the Erasmus Smith's Chair of Mathematics. The Donegall (sometimes spelt Donegal) Lectureship was endowed in 1668 by The 3rd Earl of Donegall. In 1675, after the restoration, it was combined with the previous public Professor in Mathematics position that had been created in 1652 by the Commonwealth parliament. For much of its history, the Donegall Lectureship was awarded to a mathematician as an additional honour which came with a supplementary income. Since 1967, the lectureship has been awarded to a leading international scientist who visits the Department of Pure and Applied Mathematics and gives talks, including a public lecture called the Donegall Lecture.
List of Donegall Lecturers
1675–1685: Miles Symner (1610?–1686)
1685–1692: St. George Ashe (1657–1718)
1692–1694: Charles Willoughby (1630?–1694)
1694–1696: Edward Smyth (1665–1720)
1696–1723: Claudius Gilbert (1670–1743)
1723–1730: Richard Helsham (1682–1738)
1730–1731: Charles Stuart (circa 1698–1746)
1731–1734: Lambert Hughes (1698–1771)
1734–1735: Robert Shawe (1699?–1752)
1735–1738: Caleb Cartwright (1696?–1763)
1738–1747: John Pellisier (1703–1781)
1747–1750: John Whittingham (1712–1778)
1750–1759: William Clement (1707–1782)
1759–1760: Theaker Wilder (1717–1777)
1760–1762: John Stokes (1720?–1781)
1762–1764: Richard Murray (1725?–1799)
1764–1769: Henry Joseph Dabzac (1737–1790)
1769–1770: Henry Ussher (1741–1790)
1770–1782: Gerald Fitzgerald (1739?–1819)
1782–1786: Matthew Young (1750–1800)
1786–1790: Digby Marsh (1750?–1791)
1790–1795: Thomas Elrington (1760–1835)
1795–1800: Whitley Stokes (1763–1845)
1800–1807: Robert Phipps (1765?–1844)
1807–1820: James Wilson (1774?–1829)
1820–1827: Richard MacDonnell (1787–1867)
1827–1832: Henry Harte (1790–1848)
1832–1847: Thomas Luby (1800–1870)
1847–1858: Andrew Hart (1811–1890)
1858–1867: George Salmon (1819–1904)
1867–1876: William Roberts (1817–1883)
1876–1884: Benjamin Williamson (1828–1916)
1884–1904: Arthur Panton (1843–1906)
1904–1907: Robert Russell (1858?–1938)
1917–1923: Reginald Rogers (1874–1923)
1923–1926: Charles Rowe (1893–1943)
1926–1944: TS (Stan) Broderick (1893–1962)
1967–1968: Paul Halmos (1916–2006) Spinsters, sequences and the Schroeder-Berstein theorem
1969–1970: James Hamilton (1918–2000) Discrete symmetry properties and elementary particles
1970–1971: Friedrich Hirzebruch (1927–2012) Some relations between topology and number theory
1971–1972: Ailsa Land (1927–2021) Mathematical programming
1972–1973: Dennis Sciama (1926–1999) Black holes and the future of astronomy
1976–1977: Christopher Zeeman (1925–2016) Introduction to catastrophe theory
1978–1979: Dennis Lindley (1923–2013) Decision making, probability and the law
1979–1980: Heini Halberstam (1926–2014) The formation of mathematical concepts: the vibrating s |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erasmus%20Smith%27s%20Professor%20of%20Mathematics | The Erasmus Smith's Professor of Mathematics at Trinity College Dublin is one of two endowed mathematics positions at Trinity College Dublin (TCD), the other being the Donegall Lectureship at Trinity College Dublin. It was founded in 1762 and funded by the Erasmus Smith Trust, which was established by Erasmus Smith (1611–1691). Since 1851 the position has been funded by Trinity College.
Some of the people listed here also held the Erasmus Smith's Chair of Natural and Experimental Philosophy for a period–that's another of the 4 named professorships honouring Smith's memory.
List of the professors
1762–1764: John Stokes (1720–1781)
1764–1795: Richard Murray (1725?–1799)
1795–1799: Thomas Elrington (1760–1835)
1799–1800: George Hall (1753–1811)
1800–1813: William Magee (1766–1831)
1813–1822: Bartholomew Lloyd (1772–1837)
1822–1825: James Wilson (1774?–1829)
1825–1835: Franc Sadleir (1775–1851)
1835–1843: James MacCullagh (1809–1847)
1843–1862: Charles Graves (1812–1899)
1862–1879: Michael Roberts (1817–1882)
1879–1913: William Burnside (1839–1920)
1914–1917: Stephen Kelleher (1875–1917)
1917–1921: Robert Russell (1858?–1938)
1921–1926: (vacant)
1926–1943: Charles Rowe (1893–1943)
1944–1962: TS (Stan) Broderick (1893–1962)
1962–1964: Heini Halberstam (1926–2014)
1964–1966: Gabriel Dirac (1925–1984)
1966–1989: Brian Murdoch (1930–2020)
1989–2000: (vacant)
2000–2001: Paul Feehan (born 1961)
2001–2004: (vacant)
2004–2008: Adrian Constantin (born 1970)
2008– : (vacant)
See also
List of professorships at the University of Dublin
References
1762 establishments in Ireland
Mathematics, Smith's, Erasmus
Mathematics, Smith's, Erasmus, Dublin, Trinity College |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthias%20Kohl | Matthias Kohl (born August 14, 1973 in Vilseck, Germany) is a German mathematician and statistician who is known for his contributions to the asymptotic theory of robustness and robust statistics. Kohl studied mathematics at the University of Bayreuth and earned his PhD in mathematics there, in 2005. His dissertation was entitled 'Numerical Contributions to the Asymptotic Theory of Robustness'.
He spent the first half of his career at the University of Jena as a biostatistician. At Jena, he worked on problems in the analysis of high dimensional biological data, the development and validation of microarray-based predictive models and study design. He then became professor at Furtwangen University. There, his research area are statistical methods for biomarker development and molecular diagnostics.
Publications (books)
M. Kohl, H.P. Deigner. Precision Medicine: Tools and Quantitative Approaches. 1st Edition, 2018, 374 pages. eBook , Paperback
M. Kohl. Einführung in das Programmieren mit R. 1. Auflage, 2016, .
M. Kohl. Introduction to statistical data analysis with R. 1st edition, 2015, 228 pages, free. .
M. Kohl. Analyse von Genexpressionsdaten – mit R und Bioconductor. 1. Auflage, 2013,
References
External links
His personal website
His institutional website
1973 births
Living people
People from Amberg-Sulzbach
German statisticians
University of Bayreuth alumni
21st-century German mathematicians |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nico%20Nagelkerke | Nicolaas Jan Dirk "Nico" Nagelkerke (born 1951) is a Dutch biostatistician and epidemiologist. As of 2012, he was a professor of biostatistics at the United Arab Emirates University. He previously taught at the University of Leiden in the Netherlands. He has now been retired for several years but as of now (January 2023) he is still active in research.
He is well known in epidemiology thanks to his invention of what is now known as the "Nagelkerke R2", which is one of a number of generalisations of the coefficient of determination from linear regression to logistic regression, see
Pseudo-R-squared, Coefficient of determination, Logistic regression.
References
Living people
1951 births
Dutch statisticians
Dutch epidemiologists
Biostatisticians
Leiden University alumni
University of Amsterdam alumni
Academic staff of Leiden University
Academic staff of United Arab Emirates University |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riyon%20Tori | is a Japanese footballer currently studying at the Kwansei Gakuin University.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
External links
2001 births
Living people
Association football people from Osaka Prefecture
Kwansei Gakuin University alumni
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
J3 League players
Cerezo Osaka players
Cerezo Osaka U-23 players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Likelihoodist%20statistics | Likelihoodist statistics or likelihoodism is an approach to statistics that exclusively or primarily uses the likelihood function. Likelihoodist statistics is a more minor school than the main approaches of Bayesian statistics and frequentist statistics, but has some adherents and applications. The central idea of likelihoodism is the likelihood principle: data are interpreted as evidence, and the strength of the evidence is measured by the likelihood function. Beyond this, there are significant differences within likelihood approaches: "orthodox" likelihoodists consider data only as evidence, and do not use it as the basis of statistical inference, while others make inferences based on likelihood, but without using Bayesian inference or frequentist inference. Likelihoodism is thus criticized for either not providing a basis for belief or action (if it fails to make inferences), or not satisfying the requirements of these other schools.
The likelihood function is also used in Bayesian statistics and frequentist statistics, but they differ in how it is used. Some likelihoodists consider their use of likelihood as an alternative to other approaches, while others consider it complementary and compatible with other approaches; see .
Relation with other theories
While likelihoodism is a distinct approach to statistical inference, it can be related to or contrasted with other theories and methodologies in statistics. Here are some notable connections:
Bayesian statistics: Bayesian statistics is an alternative approach to statistical inference that incorporates prior information and updates it using observed data to obtain posterior probabilities. Likelihoodism and Bayesian statistics are compatible in the sense that both methods utilize the likelihood function. However, they differ in their treatment of prior information. Bayesian statistics incorporates prior beliefs into the analysis explicitly, whereas likelihoodism focuses solely on the likelihood function without specifying a prior distribution.
Frequentist statistics: Frequentist statistics, also known as classical or frequentist inference, is another major framework for statistical analysis. Frequentist methods emphasize properties of repeated sampling and focus on concepts such as unbiasedness, consistency, and hypothesis testing. Likelihoodism can be seen as a departure from traditional frequentist methods, as it places the likelihood function at the core of statistical inference. Likelihood-based methods provide a bridge between the likelihoodist perspective and frequentist approaches by using likelihood ratios for hypothesis testing and constructing confidence intervals.
Fisherian statistics: Likelihoodism has deep connections to the statistical philosophy of Ronald Fisher. Fisher introduced the concept of likelihood and its maximization as a criterion for estimating parameters. Fisher's approach emphasized the concept of sufficiency and the maximum likelihood estimation (MLE). Likeli |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane%20Hutton | Jane Luise Hutton is a British medical statistician. Her research interests include meta-analysis, survival analysis, and ethics in mathematics, and she has participated in highly-cited studies on autism and cerebral palsy. She is a professor of statistics at the University of Warwick. She also frequently visits the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences in South Africa as a volunteer statistics instructor.
Education and career
Hutton read mathematics and statistics at the University of Edinburgh, earning a bachelor's degree with first class honours in 1982. After studying for a diploma in mathematical statistics at the University of Cambridge, she earned a PhD at Imperial College London in 1986. Her dissertation, Non-negative time series and shot noise processes as models for dry rivers, was supervised by David Cox.
She worked at the University of Liverpool from 1986 to 1995 and at Newcastle University from 1996 to 2000, before moving to the University of Warwick in 2000.
USS director
Hutton became a director of the Universities Superannuation Scheme on 1 November 2015. On 21 May 2019, it was revealed that, in her capacity as a non-executive director on the USS board of trustees, she had in March 2018 complained to the Pensions Regulator, alleging that her efforts in 2017 to check whether the USS deficit had been miscalculated had been frustrated by delays and obstructions to providing her with data to which she needed access to fulfil her fiduciary duties. As of May 2019, the Pensions Regulator and Financial Reporting Council were investigating the allegations. On 14 June 2019, as the investigation continued, the Regulator rebuked USS for claiming that aspects of USS policy were mandated by the Regulator when in fact they were not.
Hutton was suspended from USS's board in June 2019. On 11 October 2019, it was reported that she had been dismissed as a director of USS on the grounds that, according to an independent investigation by Slaughter and May, "she had breached a number of her director’s duties owed under company law and contract". USS said that the dismissal was independent of Hutton's whistleblowing and the ongoing investigation; Hutton said she did not view the decision as valid and was considering further action. Information about Hutton's dismissal was leaked on 22 February 2020. On 9 March 2020 Hutton gave an extensive interview to Portfolio Institutional.
Following her dismissal, Hutton commenced proceedings at an employment tribunal, arguing that she had been unfairly dismissed. The tribunal commenced on 17 May 2022, but Hutton unilaterally withdrew her case on 19 May.
Recognition
Hutton won a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award in 2013.
She won the 2016 Suffrage Science Maths and Computing Award of the Medical Research Council.
The International Biometric Society gave her their Rob Kempton Award in 2016, "for outstanding contributions to the development of biometry in the developing world". She is an elected mem |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rashid%20Tetteh | Rashid Tetteh (born 14 July 1995) is a Ghanaian footballer who plays as a central defender for FC Tulsa in the USL Championship.
Career statistics
References
External links
Profile at HPU Athletics
1995 births
Living people
North Carolina Fusion U23 players
Des Moines Menace players
New Mexico United players
FC Tulsa players
USL League Two players
USL Championship players
Ghanaian men's footballers
Ghanaian expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football defenders |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L%C3%A9o%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201994%29 | Leonardo Luiz dos Santos (born 3 June 1994), simply known as Léo, is a Brazilian footballer who plays for Nongbua Pitchaya as a centre back.
Career statistics
References
External links
1994 births
Living people
Brazilian men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Campeonato Brasileiro Série B players
Campeonato Brasileiro Série D players
Ituano FC players
Associação Atlética Ponte Preta players
Léo Santos
Léo Santos |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sebasti%C3%A1n%20Lentinelly | Carlos Sebastián Lentinelly Villavicencio (born 7 August 1997) is a Uruguayan professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Liverpool Montevideo.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
1997 births
Living people
Uruguayan men's footballers
Liverpool F.C. (Montevideo) players
Uruguayan Primera División players
Men's association football goalkeepers
Footballers from Salto, Uruguay |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jos%C3%A9phine%20Guidy%20Wandja | Joséphine Guidy Wandja (born 1945, also Guidy-Wandja) is an Ivorian mathematician. She is the first African woman with a PhD in mathematics.
Early life
She moved to France aged 14. She attended the Lycée Jules-Ferry in Paris, and later the Pierre and Marie Curie University. Her master's degree thesis was entitled Sous les courbes fermées convexes du plan et le théorème des quatre sommets (Under closed convex curves in the plane and the theorem of four peaks). Whilst working in Paris in the late 1960s she was advised by René Thom, Henri Cartan and Paulette Liberman. She studied for a PhD at the University of Abidjan, becoming the first African woman to get a PhD in mathematics.
Career
In 1969, she worked at the Lycée Jacques Amyot in Melun, before working for a year at the Paris Diderot University. In 1971, she joined the University of Abidjan, as a mathematics lecturer. In doing so, she became the first African female university mathematics professor. In 1983, she was appointed the president of the International Committee on Mathematics in Developing Countries (ICOMIDC). The organisation was set up during the International Mathematical Union (IMU) conference in Warsaw, Poland, but without the IMU's knowledge. In 1986, she wrote a humorous 24 page mathematical comic book Yao crack en maths. In 1985, she organised an ICOMIDC conference in Yamoussoukro, Ivory Coast.
She is an officer of the Ivorian Order of Merit of National Education, and the French Ordre des Palmes Académiques.
Publications
Guidy Wandja, Joséphine, Yao crack en maths (in French), , 1985.
References
20th-century women mathematicians
Ivorian mathematicians
Ivorian women mathematicians
1945 births
Living people
Pierre and Marie Curie University alumni
Academic staff of Université Félix Houphouët-Boigny
Université Félix Houphouët-Boigny alumni
Academic staff of Paris Diderot University
Officiers of the Ordre des Palmes Académiques |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean%20Rosso | Jean Pierre Rosso Génova (born 7 April 1997) is a Uruguayan professional footballer who plays as a right-back for Sarmiento.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
1997 births
Living people
Uruguayan men's footballers
Uruguayan expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Liverpool F.C. (Montevideo) players
Club Atlético Sarmiento footballers
Uruguayan Primera División players
Argentine Primera División players
Uruguayan expatriate sportspeople in Argentina
Expatriate men's footballers in Argentina |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danielle%20Belgrave | Danielle Charlotte Belgrave is a Trinidadian-British computer scientist based at DeepMind, who uses statistics and machine learning to understand the progression of diseases.
Early life and education
Belgrave grew up in Trinidad and Tobago, where her high school mathematics teacher inspired her to work as a data scientist. She studied statistics and business at the London School of Economics (LSE). She was a graduate student at University College London (UCL), where she earned a master's degree in statistics. In 2010 Belgrave moved to the University of Manchester, where she earned a PhD for research supervised by Iain Buchan, Christopher Bishop and supported by a Microsoft Research scholarship. She was awarded a Dorothy Hodgkin postgraduate award by Microsoft and the Barry Kay Award by the British Society of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (BSACI).
Research and career
After graduating, Belgrave worked at GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), where she was awarded the Exceptional Scientist Award. Belgrave joined Imperial College London as a Medical Research Council (MRC) statistician in 2015. She develops statistical machine learning models to look at disease progression in an effort to design new management strategies and understand heterogeneity. Statistical learning methods can inform the management of medical conditions by providing a framework for endotype discovery using probabilistic modelling. She uses statistical models to identify the underlying endotypes of a condition from a set of phenotypes.
She studied whether atopic march, the progression of allergic diseases from early life, adequately describes atopic diseases like eczema in early life. Belgrave used a latent disease profile model to study atopic march in over 9,000 children, where machine learning was used to identify groups of children with similar eczema onset patterns. She is part of the study team for early life asthma research consortium. Belgrave is interested in using big data for meaningful clinical interpretation, to inform personalized prevention strategies.
Her research focuses on Bayesian and statistical machine learning within the healthcare to develop personalized medicine. Belgrave is developing and implementing methods which incorporate domain knowledge with data-driven models. Her research interests include latent variable models, longitudinal studies, survival analysis, ‘omics, dimensionality reduction, Bayesian graphical models and cluster analysis.
Belgrave is part of the regulatory algorithms project, which evaluates how healthcare algorithms should be regulated. In particular, Belgrave is interested in what scheme of liability should be imposed on artificial intelligence for healthcare. She serves on the 2019 organizing committee of the Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems and as an advisor for DeepAfricAI.
References
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
Trinidad and Tobago emigrants to the United Kingdom
British women computer |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group%20action%20%28disambiguation%29 | Group action may refer to:
Group action (mathematics)
Group action (sociology)
See also
Action group (disambiguation)
Class action, a type of lawsuit
Collective action, action taken by a group to achieve a common objective |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HLTV | HLTV, formerly an initialism of Half-Life Television, is a news website and forum which covers professional Counter-Strike: Global Offensive esports news, tournaments and statistics. It is one of the leading websites within the Counter-Strike community with over 4 million unique visitors each month. In February 2020, the site was acquired by the sports betting group Better Collective.
History
HLTV was founded in 2002 by Martin "Martin" Rosenbæk and Per "Nomad" Lambæk. It was initially created to host recordings of Counter-Strike 1.6 matches, although it grew to include Counter-Strike and Half-Life news. HLTV started storing GOTV demos for Counter-Strike: Global Offensive when they were introduced in 2012. It has since evolved to include news, statistics, and analysis for the professional esports scene of Global Offensive.
Since late 2015, HLTV ranks the teams based on their own rating system. HLTV have awarded Most Valuable Player (MVP) medals to the highest performing player at each tournament. They also award Exceptionally Valuable Player (EVP) medals to players putting in an above average performance. In 2016, HLTV launched dust2.dk, a website dedicated to the Counter-Strike scene in Denmark. They followed this up in 2017 by launching dust2.us, a local website for the Americas. Data, such as professional match results, are fed through from the subsidiary websites to HLTV. Since 2010 with the first version of Counter-Strike, HLTV has ranked all of the professional Counter-Strike players based on their performance that year. In May 2019, HLTV was officially integrated into Global Offensive, where you can now find professional tournaments, provided by data from HLTV.
HLTV has received many visual updates throughout the years, with the most recent one taking place in 2017.
In 2020, HLTV announced that it and sister site dust2.dk had been acquired by Better Collective, a sports betting group based in Denmark.
HLTV rating
The HLTV rating is the most widely used rating system in Global Offensive, and is often used outside of HLTV.
Rating 1.0
Rating 1.0 was introduced to HLTV in 2010 with the first version of Counter-Strike. This rating was based on the number of kills per round, the survival rate of a player per round, and the amount of multikills a player got, which is known as the impact rating. The higher each of these values are, the higher rating a player would get. The HLTV 1.0 rating came under criticism for being too similar to the Kill/Death ratio.
Rating 2.0
Rating 2.0 was introduced to HLTV on June 6, 2017, as an update to Rating 1.0. Added were two new factors, Kill/Assist/Survival/Traded (KAST) and Average Damage per Round (ADR), along with a changed impact rating. KAST measures the percentage of rounds where a player contributes by killing an enemy, assisting a teammate, surviving a round or getting revenge on an enemy for killing a teammate, known as trading. Impact rating is based on the number of multi-kills, opening ki |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orlicz%20sequence%20space | In mathematics, an Orlicz sequence space is any of certain class of linear spaces of scalar-valued sequences, endowed with a special norm, specified below, under which it forms a Banach space. Orlicz sequence spaces generalize the spaces, and as such play an important role in functional analysis.
Definition
Fix so that denotes either the real or complex scalar field. We say that a function is an Orlicz function if it is continuous, nondecreasing, and (perhaps nonstrictly) convex, with and . In the special case where there exists with for all it is called degenerate.
In what follows, unless otherwise stated we'll assume all Orlicz functions are nondegenerate. This implies for all .
For each scalar sequence set
We then define the Orlicz sequence space with respect to , denoted , as the linear space of all such that for some , endowed with the norm .
Two other definitions will be important in the ensuing discussion. An Orlicz function is said to satisfy the Δ2 condition at zero whenever
We denote by the subspace of scalar sequences such that for all .
Properties
The space is a Banach space, and it generalizes the classical spaces in the following precise sense: when , , then coincides with the -norm, and hence ; if is the degenerate Orlicz function then coincides with the -norm, and hence in this special case, and when is degenerate.
In general, the unit vectors may not form a basis for , and hence the following result is of considerable importance.
Theorem 1. If is an Orlicz function then the following conditions are equivalent:
Two Orlicz functions and satisfying the Δ2 condition at zero are called equivalent whenever there exist are positive constants such that for all . This is the case if and only if the unit vector bases of and are equivalent.
can be isomorphic to without their unit vector bases being equivalent. (See the example below of an Orlicz sequence space with two nonequivalent symmetric bases.)
Theorem 2. Let be an Orlicz function. Then is reflexive if and only if
and .
Theorem 3 (K. J. Lindberg). Let be an infinite-dimensional closed subspace of a separable Orlicz sequence space . Then has a subspace isomorphic to some Orlicz sequence space for some Orlicz function satisfying the Δ2 condition at zero. If furthermore has an unconditional basis then may be chosen to be complemented in , and if has a symmetric basis then itself is isomorphic to .
Theorem 4 (Lindenstrauss/Tzafriri). Every separable Orlicz sequence space contains a subspace isomorphic to for some .
Corollary. Every infinite-dimensional closed subspace of a separable Orlicz sequence space contains a further subspace isomorphic to for some .
Note that in the above Theorem 4, the copy of may not always be chosen to be complemented, as the following example shows.
Example (Lindenstrauss/Tzafriri). There exists a separable and reflexive Orlicz sequence space which fails to contain a complemented |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luiz%C3%A3o%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201988%29 | Luiz Fernando dos Santos (born 22 October 1988), simply known as Luizão, is a Brazilian footballer who plays for Altos as a striker.
Career statistics
References
External links
1988 births
Living people
Brazilian men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Campeonato Brasileiro Série D players
Toledo Esporte Clube players
Foz do Iguaçu Futebol Clube players
Futebol Clube Santa Cruz players
Clube Atlético Votuporanguense players
Clube Atlético Juventus players
União São João Esporte Clube players
São Carlos Futebol Clube players
Fernandópolis Futebol Clube players
Mixto Esporte Clube players
Nacional Fast Clube players
Globo Futebol Clube players
Central Sport Club players
Associação Atlética de Altos players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Pringle%20%28biologist%29 | John R. Pringle is an American scientist. He is a professor at Stanford University. He received an AB in Mathematics from Harvard University and a PhD in Biology also from Harvard University (1970).
He is the 2013 recipient of the E.B. Wilson Medal, the American Society for Cell Biology's highest honor for science.
He married Beverly S. Mitchell (September 5, 1971) and has two children, Robert and Elizabeth both biologists.
References
Harvard College alumni
Living people
American geneticists
Stanford University faculty
Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences alumni
Year of birth missing (living people) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter%20Sendscheid | Peter Sendscheid (born 28 September 1965) is a retired German footballer. He played as a striker for Alemannia Aachen and Schalke 04 in the Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga.
Career statistics
References
External links
1965 births
Living people
German men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Bundesliga players
2. Bundesliga players
Alemannia Aachen players
FC Schalke 04 players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donegall | Donegall may refer to:
Donegall Lectureship at Trinity College Dublin, lectureship in mathematics at TCD
Donegall Square, a square in the centre of Belfast, County Antrim, Northern Ireland
Donegall Road, a residential area and road thoroughfare in west Belfast
Donegall Arms shooting, attack by a small Irish Republican paramilitary group in December 1991
Donegall Pass, a place on the Ormeau Road in south Belfast
Marquess of Donegall, Irish peerages associated with County Donegal
Donegall Street bombing, Provisional IRA car bombing in Belfast on 20 March, 1972
See also
Donegal (disambiguation) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Orlando%20Pride%20records%20and%20statistics | Orlando Pride is an American professional soccer team based in Orlando, Florida, that competes in the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL).
This is a list of franchise records which date from the team's inaugural NWSL season in 2016 to present.
All stats accurate as of match played October 15, 2023.
Player records
Appearances
Youngest first-team player: Amanda Allen – (against Racing Louisville, May 6, 2023)
Oldest first-team player: Erin McLeod – (against OL Reign, October 1, 2022)
Oldest first-team player (outfield): Marta – (against Houston Dash, October 15, 2023)
Most appearances
Bolded players are currently on the Orlando Pride roster.
Goals
Youngest goalscorer: Danica Evans – (against Washington Spirit, April 22, 2017)
Oldest goalscorer: Marta – (against Houston Dash, October 15, 2023)
Most goals in a season: 13 – Marta, 2017
Most goals scored in a match: 2 – (7 players, 12 occasions)
Kristen Edmonds v Boston Breakers, July 10, 2016
Marta v Houston Dash, June 17, 2017
Marta v Washington Spirit, July 8, 2017
Alex Morgan v Sky Blue FC, August 12, 2017
Marta v Sky Blue FC, August 12, 2017
Alex Morgan v Boston Breakers, August 19, 2017
Rachel Hill v Boston Breakers, September 2, 2017
Sydney Leroux v Chicago Red Stars, May 26, 2018
Sydney Leroux v Sky Blue FC, June 16, 2018
Marta v Washington Spirit, July 6, 2019
Darian Jenkins v North Carolina Courage, April 16, 2022
Adriana v Portland Thorns, June 11, 2023
Julie Doyle v Washington Spirit, July 1, 2023
Goals in consecutive league matches: 5 consecutive matches – Alex Morgan, August 5, 2017 to September 2, 2017
Fastest goal: 1 minute 32 seconds – Sydney Leroux v Sky Blue FC, June 16, 2018
Latest goal (not AET): 97 minutes 53 seconds – Darian Jenkins v Washington Spirit, May 27, 2022
Overall goals
Competitive, professional matches only, appearances including substitutes appear in brackets.
Bolded players are currently on the Orlando Pride roster.
Goalkeeping
Youngest goalkeeper: Lainey Burdett – (against Washington Spirit, October 5, 2019)
Oldest goalkeeper: Erin McLeod – (against OL Reign, October 1, 2022)
Most shutouts
Competitive, professional matches only, appearances including substitutes appear in brackets.
Bolded players are currently on the Orlando Pride roster.
Team records
Record wins
Record NWSL regular season win:
5–0 vs Sky Blue FC, August 12, 2017
5–0 vs Chicago Red Stars, August 20, 2023
Record NWSL Challenge Cup win: 1–0 vs Washington Spirit, April 21, 2021
Record home win:
5–0 vs Sky Blue FC, August 12, 2017
5–0 vs Chicago Red Stars, August 20, 2023
Record road win:
5–2 vs Chicago Red Stars, May 26, 2018
3–0 vs Washington Spirit, July 1, 2023
Record defeats
Record NWSL regular season defeat: 0–6 vs Portland Thorns, June 19, 2022
Record playoff defeat: 1–4 vs Portland Thorns FC, October 7, 2017
Record NWSL Challenge Cup defeat: 0–5 vs North Carolina Courage, July 29, 2023
Record home defeat:
0–3 vs North Carolina C |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ifwat%20Ismail | Ifwat Ismail is a Singaporean footballer currently playing as a forward for Geylang International.
He scored a hat-trick against Tampines Rovers in the league cup.
Career statistics
As @ 21 Sept 2019
References
1997 births
Living people
Singaporean men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Singapore Premier League players
Geylang International FC players
Young Lions FC players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murilo%20Henrique | Murilo Henrique Pereira Rocha (born 20 November 1996), known as Murilo or Murilo Henrique, is a Brazilian footballer who plays for Suwon FC as a midfielder.
Career
Career statistics
References
External links
1994 births
Living people
Brazilian men's footballers
Brazilian expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Campeonato Brasileiro Série A players
Campeonato Brasileiro Série B players
Campeonato Brasileiro Série D players
K League 1 players
Goiás Esporte Clube players
Associação Atlética Aparecidense players
Clube Atlético Linense players
Associação Atlética Ponte Preta players
Grêmio Esportivo Novorizontino players
Botafogo Futebol Clube (SP) players
Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors players
Suwon FC players
Expatriate men's footballers in South Korea
Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in South Korea
Footballers from São Paulo |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam%20Curry%20%28footballer%29 | Adam Curry (born 21 May 1997) is an English footballer who most recently played for Hull City.
He was released by Hull City at the end of the 2018–19 season.
Career statistics
References
External links
English men's footballers
1997 births
Living people
Men's association football midfielders
Hull City A.F.C. players
Boston United F.C. players
Spennymoor Town F.C. players
Alfreton Town F.C. players
Matlock Town F.C. players
National League (English football) players
Footballers from Jarrow |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marty%20Schafer | Marty Schafer is a former American soccer player who played for Dayton Dynamo in the NPSL.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
Living people
American men's soccer players
Men's association football defenders
Dayton Dynamo players
Ohio Xoggz players
National Professional Soccer League (1984–2001) players
Year of birth missing (living people) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris%20Pfau | Chris Pfau is a former American soccer player who played in the NPSL.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
Living people
American men's soccer players
Men's association football forwards
Canton Invaders players
Dayton Dynamo players
Cincinnati Silverbacks players
Cincinnati Riverhawks players
National Professional Soccer League (1984–2001) players
A-League (1995–2004) players
Old Dominion Monarchs men's soccer players
Evansville Purple Aces women's soccer coaches
Houston Cougars women's soccer coaches
Akron Zips women's soccer coaches
1967 births |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben%20Pollock%20%28soccer%29 | Ben Pollock is a former American soccer player who played in the NPSL.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
Living people
American men's soccer players
Men's association football forwards
Dayton Dynamo players
Memphis Rogues players
Detroit Rockers players
Harrisburg Heat players
National Professional Soccer League (1984–2001) players
Year of birth missing (living people) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algorithmic%20technique | In mathematics and computer science, an algorithmic technique is a general approach for implementing a process or computation.
General techniques
There are several broadly recognized algorithmic techniques that offer a proven method or process for designing and constructing algorithms. Different techniques may be used depending on the objective, which may include searching, sorting, mathematical optimization, constraint satisfaction, categorization, analysis, and prediction.
Brute force
Brute force is a simple, exhaustive technique that evaluates every possible outcome to find a solution.
Divide and conquer
The divide and conquer technique decomposes complex problems recursively into smaller sub-problems. Each sub-problem is then solved and these partial solutions are recombined to determine the overall solution. This technique is often used for searching and sorting.
Dynamic
Dynamic programming is a systematic technique in which a complex problem is decomposed recursively into smaller, overlapping subproblems for solution. Dynamic programming stores the results of the overlapping sub-problems locally using an optimization technique called memoization.
Evolutionary
An evolutionary approach develops candidate solutions and then, in a manner similar to biological evolution, performs a series of random alterations or combinations of these solutions and evaluates the new results against a fitness function. The most fit or promising results are selected for additional iterations, to achieve an overall optimal solution.
Graph traversal
Graph traversal is a technique for finding solutions to problems that can be represented as graphs. This approach is broad, and includes depth-first search, breadth-first search, tree traversal, and many specific variations that may include local optimizations and excluding search spaces that can be determined to be non-optimum or not possible. These techniques may be used to solve a variety of problems including shortest path and constraint satisfaction problems.
Greedy
A greedy approach begins by evaluating one possible outcome from the set of possible outcomes, and then searches locally for an improvement on that outcome. When a local improvement is found, it will repeat the process and again search locally for additional improvements near this local optimum. A greedy technique is generally simple to implement, and these series of decisions can be used to find local optimums depending on where the search began. However, greedy techniques may not identify the global optimum across the entire set of possible outcomes.,
Heuristic
A heuristic approach employs a practical method to reach an immediate solution not guaranteed to be optimal.
Learning
Learning techniques employ statistical methods to perform categorization and analysis without explicit programming. Supervised learning, unsupervised learning, reinforcement learning, and deep learning techniques are included in this category.
Mathematical optimization
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jules%20Haabo | Jules Haabo (born 12 April 1997), is a French Guianan professional footballer who plays for the French Guiana national football team.
Career statistics
International
International goals
Scores and results list French Guiana's goal tally first.
References
External links
Jules Haabo at Caribbean Football Database
1997 births
Living people
Men's association football midfielders
French Guianan men's footballers
French Guiana men's international footballers
People from Kourou |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yannick%20Passape | Yannick Passape (born 19 April 1982), is a Guadeloupean professional footballer who plays for the Guadeloupe national football team.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
International
International goals
Scores and results list Guadeloupe's goal tally first.
References
External links
Yannick Passape at Caribbean Football Database
1982 births
Living people
Men's association football forwards
Guadeloupean men's footballers
Guadeloupean expatriate men's footballers
Guadeloupe men's international footballers
US Granville players
US Avranches players
US Quevilly-Rouen Métropole players
Jura Sud Foot players
FC Fleury 91 players
CS Moulien players
Expatriate men's footballers in France |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fahmi%20El-Shami | Fahmi El-Shami is a former Libyan soccer player who played in the NPSL.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
Living people
Libyan men's footballers
Libyan expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
San Diego Sockers (1978–1996) indoor players
Major Indoor Soccer League (1978–1992) players
Canton Invaders players
Hershey Impact players
Chicago Power players
Dayton Dynamo players
Milwaukee Wave players
Atlanta Silverbacks FC players
National Professional Soccer League (1984–2001) players
Expatriate men's soccer players in the United States
Libyan expatriate sportspeople in the United States
People from Benghazi
Year of birth missing (living people) |
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