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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jiang%20Kewei | Jiang Kewei (; born 30 January 1989) is a Chinese former footballer.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
1989 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Chinese Super League players
Shanghai Shenxin F.C. players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teng%20Bin | Teng Bin (; born 24 July 1985) is a Chinese former footballer.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
1985 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Singapore Premier League players
Chinese Super League players
Shanghai Shenxin F.C. players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zhao%20Yang | Zhao Yang (; born 11 December 1985) is a Chinese former footballer.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
1985 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Singapore Premier League players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z%C3%A9%20Alcino | José Alcino Rosa (born 8 June 1974), commonly known as Zé Alcino, is a Brazilian former footballer.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
1974 births
Living people
Brazilian men's footballers
Brazilian expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Sport Club Internacional players
Grêmio Foot-Ball Porto Alegrense players
AS Nancy Lorraine players
Beijing Chengfeng F.C. players
Esporte Clube São José players
Grêmio Esportivo Brasil players
Clube Esportivo Bento Gonçalves players
Esporte Clube Novo Hamburgo players
Esporte Clube Avenida players
Campeonato Brasileiro Série A players
Ligue 1 players
Ligue 2 players
Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in France
Expatriate men's footballers in France
Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in China
Expatriate men's footballers in China
People from São Borja |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vidurio%20ir%20vakar%C5%B3%20Lietuvos%20regionas | Vidurio ir vakarų Lietuvos regionas is statistical area of the Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics, level NUTS 2. It includes all counties of Lithuania except Vilnius County.
Region covers land area of 55,569 km2 and has population of approximately 2.0 million people.
In 2016, the Seimas announced the creation of new NUTS-2 regions for Lithuania: "Sostinės regionas" or "capital region" and "Vidurio ir vakarų Lietuvos regionas" or "Middle and Western Lithuania". New regions were approved by European parliament on 21 November 2016.
Economy
The Gross domestic product (GDP) of the region was 31.9 billion € in 2021, accounting for 57% of Lithuanian economic output. GDP per capita was around €16,000 .
References
NUTS 2 statistical regions of the European Union |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belinda%20Bencic%20career%20statistics | This is a list of the main career statistics of professional Swiss tennis player Belinda Bencic. She has won eight singles and two doubles titles on the WTA Tour. She made her breakthrough at the age of 18 when she won her first WTA title, the Premier Eastbourne International, and later that year her first WTA 1000 title at the Canadian Open. In 2019, she won her second WTA 1000 title at the Dubai Championships. She was also the US Open semifinalist in 2019.
Her contributions to the Swiss team can be seen at both the Billie Jean King Cup and the Summer Olympics. At the Billie Jean King Cup she was part of the team to reach the final in 2021 and in addition to get to two semifinals before that. Belinda made her Summer Olympics debut in 2021 and won two medals. In the singles event, she defeated Markéta Vondroušová in the final to win the gold medal, while in doubles alongside Viktorija Golubic won the silver medal after losing to Czechs Barbora Krejčíková and Kateřina Siniaková.
In singles, Bencic broke into the top 10 in 2016 when she was 18 years old reaching a ranking of 7. Then in 2020 she reached her new career highest rank of No. 4. Due to more focus in singles, she has never entered the top 50 in doubles but has been close, getting to the rank of No. 59 in 2016.
Performance timelines
Only main-draw results in WTA Tour, Grand Slam tournaments, Fed Cup/Billie Jean King Cup, Hopman Cup, United Cup and Olympic Games are included in win–loss records.
Singles
Current after the 2023 San Diego Open.
Doubles
Current after the 2023 Australian Open.
Significant finals
Olympic Games
Singles: 1 (gold medal)
Doubles: 1 (silver medal)
WTA 1000 finals
Singles: 2 (2 titles)
WTA Tour finals
Singles: 18 (8 titles, 10 runner–ups)
Doubles: 3 (2 titles, 1 runner-up)
WTA Challenger finals
Singles: 2 (2 titles)
ITF Circuit finals
Singles: 6 (5 titles, 1 runner–up)
Doubles: 5 (3 titles, 2 runner–ups)
Junior Grand Slam tournament finals
Girls' singles: 2 (2 titles)
Girls' doubles: 3 (3 runner–ups)
WTA Tour career earnings
Current through the 2022 Tallinn Open.
{|cellpadding=3 cellspacing=0 border=1 style=border:#aaa;solid:1px;border-collapse:collapse;text-align:center;
|-style=background:#eee;font-weight:bold
|width="90"|Year
|width="100"|Grand Slam <br/ >singles titles|width="100"|WTA <br/ >singles titles
|width="100"|Total <br/ >singles titles
|width="120"|Earnings ($)
|width="100"|Money list rank
|-
|2014
|0
|0
|0
| align="right" |721,411
|37
|-
|2015
|0
|2
|2
| align="right" |1,480,572
|20
|-
|2016
|0
|0
|0
| align="right" |692,229
|45
|-
|2017
|0
|0
|0
| align="right" |130,978
|176
|-
|2018
|0
|0
|0
| align="right" |595,879
|65
|-
|2019
|0
|2
|2
| align="right" |4,113,075
|bgcolor=eee8aa|9
|-
|2020
|0
|0
|0
| align="right" |321,604
|74
|-
|2021
|0
|1
|1
| align="right" |1,132,234
|28
|-
|2022
|0
|1
|1
|align=right|1,283,016
|25
|- style="font-weight:bold;"
|Career
|0
|6
|6
| align="right" |10,583,062
|56
|}
Career Grand Slam statistics |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Williamson%20conjecture | In combinatorial mathematics, specifically in combinatorial design theory and combinatorial matrix theory the Williamson conjecture is that Williamson matrices of order exist for all positive integers .
Four symmetric and circulant matrices , , , are known as Williamson matrices if their entries are and they satisfy the relationship
where is the identity matrix of order . John Williamson showed that if , , , are Williamson matrices then
is an Hadamard matrix of order .
It was once considered likely that Williamson matrices exist for all orders
and that the structure of Williamson matrices could provide a route to proving the Hadamard conjecture that Hadamard matrices exist for all orders .
However, in 1993 the Williamson conjecture was shown to be false via an exhaustive computer search by Dragomir Ž. Ðoković, who showed that Williamson matrices do not exist in order . In 2008, the counterexamples 47, 53, and 59 were additionally discovered.
References
Combinatorial design
Disproved conjectures |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute%20number | Absolute number may refer to:
Quantity, a property that can exist as a multitude or magnitude
Mathematics
Absolute value, the non-negative value of a real number without regard to its sign
Absolute error, the absolute value of an approximation error in some data
Absolute difference, the absolute value of the difference of two real numbers
Absolute pseudoprime, a class of pseudoprimes that come from Fermat's little theorem
Absolute scale, system of measurement that begins at a zero point and progresses in only one direction
See also
Absolute zero, the lowest limit of the thermodynamic temperature scale
Absolute magnitude, a measure of the luminosity of a celestial object
Relative change and difference, used to compare two quantities taking into account the "sizes" of the things being compared
Absolute (disambiguation)
Number (disambiguation) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maura%20Mast | Maura B. Mast is an Irish-American mathematician, mathematics educator, and academic administrator, specializing in differential geometry and quantitative reasoning. With Ethan D. Bolker, she is the author of the textbook Common Sense Mathematics. Mast is dean of Fordham College at Rose Hill, part of Fordham University.
Early life and education
Mast is the daughter of Cecil B. Mast (1927–2008), a mathematics professor at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana. Her mother was Irish, and Mast has dual Irish and American citizenship. She grew up in South Bend and did her undergraduate studies at Notre Dame, with a double major in mathematics and anthropology.
She completed her doctorate in mathematics in 1992 at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her dissertation, Closed Geodesics in 2-step Nilmanifolds, concerned the differential geometry of geodesics on curved surfaces, and was supervised by Pat Eberlein.
Career
Mast became a faculty member at the University of Northern Iowa in 1992.
After visiting professorships at Northeastern University and Wellesley College, she moved to the University of Massachusetts Boston in 1998. There, in 2009, she became associate vice provost for undergraduate studies. In 2015 she came to Fordham University as the first female dean of Fordham College at Rose Hill.
In 2022 she earned and was promoted to rank of full Professor at Fordham University.
Activism
Mast has been an active member of the Clavius Group, a group of Jesuit and lay mathematicians, and is a strong supporter of the Jesuit vision of Catholic spirituality.
She has also been a passionate advocate for the advancement of women in mathematics and science, which she writes is "crucial for the future of the country and for women". She has participated in the governance of the Association for Women in Mathematics as Clerk and Executive Committee member of the association.
Mast was chair of the Special Interest Group on Quantitative Literacy of the Mathematical Association of America for 2006–2007.
Books
Common Sense Mathematics (with Ethan D. Bolker, Mathematical Association of America, 2016)
Women in Mathematics: Celebrating the Centennial of the Mathematical Association of America (edited with Janet Beery, Sarah J. Greenwald, and Jacqueline Jensen-Vallin, Springer, 2017)
Recognition
In 2017 Mast was given the Association for Women in Mathematics Service Award.
The Association for Women in Mathematics has included Mast in the 2020 class of AWM Fellows for "her sustained and deep contributions to promoting and encouraging the participation of women in the mathematical sciences through AWM, the Joint Committee on Women, the MAA, and through leadership in academia".
References
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
20th-century American mathematicians
21st-century American mathematicians
Irish mathematicians
American women mathematicians
People from South Bend, Indiana
University of Notre Dame alumni
University of |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filip%20Cvijovi%C4%87 | Filip Cvijović (born 3 July 2000) is a Serbian footballer currently playing as a goalkeeper for Serbian First League side Sloboda Užice.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2000 births
Living people
Serbian men's footballers
Men's association football goalkeepers
Serbian First League players
FK Sloboda Užice players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fabrizia%20Mealli | Fabrizia Mealli (born 22 July 1966) is an Italian statistician at the University of Florence, known for her research on causal inference, missing data, and the statistics of employment. In 2013 she was named a Fellow of the American Statistical Association.
Mealli earned a laurea in economics from the University of Florence in 1990, and completed her Ph.D. in statistics at the same university in 1994.
After postdoctoral research at the University of Leicester she returned to Florence as a faculty member in statistics.
References
External links
Home page
1966 births
Living people
Italian statisticians
Women statisticians
Fellows of the American Statistical Association |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton%E2%80%93Gauss%20line | In geometry, the Newton–Gauss line (or Gauss–Newton line) is the line joining the midpoints of the three diagonals of a complete quadrilateral.
The midpoints of the two diagonals of a convex quadrilateral with at most two parallel sides are distinct and thus determine a line, the Newton line. If the sides of such a quadrilateral are extended to form a complete quadrangle, the diagonals of the quadrilateral remain diagonals of the complete quadrangle and the Newton line of the quadrilateral is the Newton–Gauss line of the complete quadrangle.
Complete quadrilaterals
Any four lines in general position (no two lines are parallel, and no three are concurrent) form a complete quadrilateral. This configuration consists of a total of six points, the intersection points of the four lines, with three points on each line and precisely two lines through each point. These six points can be split into pairs so that the line segments determined by any pair do not intersect any of the given four lines except at the endpoints. These three line segments are called diagonals of the complete quadrilateral.
Existence of the Newton−Gauss line
It is a well-known theorem that the three midpoints of the diagonals of a complete quadrilateral are collinear.
There are several proofs of the result based on areas or wedge products or, as the following proof, on Menelaus's theorem, due to Hillyer and published in 1920.
Let the complete quadrilateral be labeled as in the diagram with diagonals and their respective midpoints . Let the midpoints of be respectively. Using similar triangles it is seen that intersects at , intersects at and intersects at . Again, similar triangles provide the following proportions,
However, the line intersects the sides of triangle , so by Menelaus's theorem the product of the terms on the right hand sides is −1. Thus, the product of the terms on the left hand sides is also −1 and again by Menelaus's theorem, the points are collinear on the sides of triangle .
Applications to cyclic quadrilaterals
The following are some results that use the Newton–Gauss line of complete quadrilaterals that are associated with cyclic quadrilaterals, based on the work of Barbu and Patrascu.
Equal angles
Given any cyclic quadrilateral , let point be the point of intersection between the two diagonals and . Extend the diagonals and until they meet at the point of intersection, . Let the midpoint of the segment be , and let the midpoint of the segment be (Figure 1).
Theorem
If the midpoint of the line segment is , the Newton–Gauss line of the complete quadrilateral and the line determine an angle equal to .
Proof
First show that the triangles are similar.
Since and , we know . Also,
In the cyclic quadrilateral , these equalities hold:
Therefore, .
Let be the radii of the circumcircles of respectively. Apply the law of sines to the triangles, to obtain:
Since and , this shows the equality The similarity of triangle |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yushi%20Hasegawa | is a Japanese professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Tokushima Vortis.
Club statistics
Updated to 7 December 2019.
References
External links
1996 births
Living people
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Oita Trinita players
J1 League players
Association football people from Kagoshima Prefecture |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David%20Tweh | David Tweh (born 25 December 1998) is a Liberian professional footballer who plays for Liga I club Botoșani and the Liberian national team.
Career statistics
References
External links
1998 births
Living people
Footballers from Monrovia
Liberian men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Fath Union Sport players
Barrack Young Controllers FC players
FC Energetik-BGU Minsk players
FC Dynamo Brest players
FC Rukh Brest players
Hapoel Nof HaGalil F.C. players
FC Botoșani players
Belarusian Premier League players
Israeli Premier League players
Liga Leumit players
Liga I players
Liberia men's international footballers
Liberian expatriate men's footballers
Expatriate men's footballers in Belarus
Expatriate men's footballers in Israel
Expatriate men's footballers in Romania
Liberian expatriate sportspeople in Belarus
Liberian expatriate sportspeople in Israel
Liberian expatriate sportspeople in Romania |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward%20Lebler | Edward Lebler (born 20 May 1958) is an Austrian ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournaments at the 1984 Winter Olympics and the 1988 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
References
External links
1958 births
Living people
Austrian ice hockey players
EC KAC players
EC Red Bull Salzburg players
EC VSV players
EK Zell am See players
Olympic ice hockey players for Austria
Ice hockey players at the 1984 Winter Olympics
Ice hockey players at the 1988 Winter Olympics
Sportspeople from British Columbia
NCAA men's ice hockey national champions
Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey players
20th-century Austrian people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darryl%20Holm | Darryl Holm (born 4 October 1947) is an American applied mathematician, and Professor of Applied Mathematics and Mathematical Physics in the Department of Mathematics at Imperial College London. He studied Physics at the University of Minnesota (1963-1967), and Physics and Mathematics at the University of Michigan (1967-1971). He joined the Theoretical Design Division of Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) in 1972 where he worked on the physics of strong shock waves and high-temperature hydrodynamic phenomena. At LANL Darryl also wrote his PhD dissertation entitled "Symmetry breaking in fluid dynamics: Lie group reducible motions for real fluids", receiving his PhD in 1976, supervised by Roy Axford. A result discovered in this work was later used to substantiate the accuracy of the Los Alamos on-site yield verification method (CORRTEX) for the US-USSR Threshold Test Ban Treaty (TTBT). In 1980, Darryl moved to the Theoretical Division, where he helped found the Center for Nonlinear Studies and served as one of its acting directors.
Darryl's main research contributions have been in nonlinear science, from integrable to chaotic behaviour, from solitons to turbulence, and from fluid dynamics to shape analysis. Much of this work is based on Lie symmetry reduction from Hamilton's principle. Darryl's main activities have been based on his use of geometric mechanics to derive and analyse nonlinear evolution equations for multiscale phenomena. Applications of these equations range from climate modelling and ocean circulation, to template matching in imaging science, to telecommunications. The solution behavior of these equations includes solitons (governed by the Camassa-Holm equation), turbulence (modelled by the LANS-alpha equation), template marching for biomedical images (modelled by the EPDiff equation) and the method of stochastic advection by Lie transport (SALT) for uncertainty quantification and reduction of uncertainty via data assimilation for upper ocean dynamics.
With Roberto Camassa, he derived the Camassa-Holm equation, which is an integrable partial differential equation for nonlinear shallow water waves, whose solutions in the dispersionless limit are peaked solitons, so called peakons, published in 1993. In 2005, he moved to Imperial College London as Professor of Applied Mathematics and Mathematical Physics, supported by a Wolfson fellowship, and was awarded an ERC advanced grant in 2011. Recently Darryl received an ERC synergy grant together with Dan Crisan, Etienne Memin and Bertrand Chapron to perform research on stochastic transport in the upper ocean (2020-2025).
He has written a number of books in geometric mechanics.
References
Living people
1947 births
20th-century American mathematicians
Academics of Imperial College London
University of Minnesota College of Science and Engineering alumni
University of Michigan alumni
21st-century American mathematicians |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markus%20Lehto | Markus Lehto (born 20 October 1962) is a Finnish ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1984 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
1962 births
Living people
Finnish ice hockey players
Olympic ice hockey players for Finland
Ice hockey players at the 1984 Winter Olympics
Ice hockey people from Helsinki |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hannu%20Oksanen | Hannu Oksanen (born 15 November 1957) is a Finnish ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1984 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
1957 births
Living people
Finnish ice hockey players
Olympic ice hockey players for Finland
Ice hockey players at the 1984 Winter Olympics
People from Ylöjärvi
Ice hockey people from Pirkanmaa |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harri%20Tuohimaa | Harri Tuohimaa (born 21 November 1959) is a Finnish ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1984 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
1959 births
Living people
Olympic ice hockey players for Finland
Ice hockey players at the 1984 Winter Olympics
Ice hockey people from Turku |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Betz | Michael Betz (born 19 February 1962) is a German ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1984 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
References
External links
1962 births
Living people
EV Landshut players
Starbulls Rosenheim players
German ice hockey players
Olympic ice hockey players for West Germany
Ice hockey players at the 1984 Winter Olympics
Ice hockey people from Landshut |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoshio%20Koizumi | is a Japanese professional footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder for Urawa Red Diamonds.
Honours
Club
Urawa Red Diamonds
Emperor's Cup: 2021
AFC Champions League: 2022
Club statistics
.
Notes
References
External links
1996 births
Living people
Japanese men's footballers
Association football people from Tokyo
Men's association football midfielders
FC Ryukyu players
Urawa Red Diamonds players
J2 League players
J1 League players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soichiro%20Fujitaka | , nicknamed So, is a Japanese professional basketball player who plays for Bambitious Nara of the B.League in Japan. He also plays for Japan men's national 3x3 team.
Non-FIBA Events statistics
|-
| align="left" | 2013
| align="left" | Universiade Japan
|7 || || 15.10 ||.550 || .250 ||.733 || 2.7 ||1.3 || 0.7 ||0.0 || 5.1
|-
Career statistics
Regular season
|-
| align="left" | 2011-12
| align="left" | Nippon Tornadoes
| 1||1 || 48.0|| .304|| .000|| .250|| 7.0|| 1.0|| 1.0|| 0.0|| 15.0
|-
| align="left" | 2014-15
| align="left" | Hitachi
| 37||1 || 9.1|| .417|| .190|| .586|| 1.1|| 0.2|| 0.2|| 0.1|| 2.9
|-
| align="left" | 2015-16
| align="left" | Hitachi
| 30|| || 6.9|| .440|| .400|| .769|| 0.8|| 0.3|| 0.2|| 0.1|| | 2.0
|-
| align="left" | 2016-17
| align="left" | Shibuya
| 57||2 || 8.9|| .430|| .367|| .619|| 1.2|| 0.4|| 0.2|| 0.0|| | 1.9
|-
| align="left" | 2017-18
| align="left" | Osaka
| 49||9 || 14.5|| .439|| .292|| .745|| 1.2|| 1.2|| 0.5|| 0.1|| | 4.4
|-
| align="left" | 2018-19
| align="left" | Osaka
| 60||12 || 15.9|| .398|| .283|| .492|| 1.1|| 0.9|| 0.3|| 0.1|| | 3.7
|-
Early cup games
|-
|style="text-align:left;"|2017
|style="text-align:left;"|Osaka
| 3 || 0 || 15.17 || .625 || 1.000 || .667 || 1.7 || 0.7 || 0 || 0 || 4.3
|-
|style="text-align:left;"|2018
|style="text-align:left;"|Osaka
| 2 || 2 || 20.03 || .444 || .000 || .500 || 3.0 || 1.0 || 0.5 || 0 || 5.0
|-
Personal
He married Mika Kurihara, a professional basketball player for the Toyota Antelopes, in 2017.
External links
References
1991 births
Living people
Japanese men's basketball players
Japan national 3x3 basketball team players
Nippon Tornadoes players
Osaka Evessa players
Sportspeople from Osaka Prefecture
Sun Rockers Shibuya players
Forwards (basketball) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M%C3%A1rio%20Grman | Mário Grman (born 11 April 1997) is a Slovak professional ice hockey defenceman currently playing for HC Vítkovice Ridera in the Czech Extraliga (ELH).
Career statistics
International
References
External links
1997 births
Living people
Slovak ice hockey defencemen
HPK players
Kootenay Ice players
MsHK Žilina players
Piráti Chomutov players
Red Deer Rebels players
HC Slovan Bratislava players
SaiPa players
Sportspeople from Topoľčany
Ice hockey people from the Nitra Region
Ice hockey players at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic ice hockey players for Slovakia
Slovak expatriate ice hockey players in Canada
Slovak expatriate ice hockey players in the Czech Republic
Slovak expatriate ice hockey players in Finland
HC Vítkovice players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yusei%20Sugiura | is a Japanese professional basketball player who plays for the Shiga Lakes of the B.League in Japan. He also plays for Japan men's national 3x3 team.
Non-FIBA Events statistics
|-
| align="left" | 2015
| align="left" | Universiade Japan
|6 || || 6.55 ||.417 || .500 ||.750 || 1.3 ||0.5 || 0.3 ||0.0 || 3.0
|-
| align="left" | 2017
| align="left" | Universiade Japan
|7 || || 16.11 ||.319 || .100 ||.333 || 2.6 ||0.6 || 0.6 ||0.1 || 4.6
|-
! align="left" | 2015-17
! align="left" | Average
!13 || || 11.54 ||.339 || .214 ||.636 || 2.0 ||0.5 || 0.5 ||0.1 || 3.8
|-
Career statistics
Regular season
|-
| align="left" | 2016-17
| align="left" |Shibuya
| 6 || 0 || 4.29|| .231 || .111 || .000 || 0.5 || 0.0 || 0.0 || 0.0 || 1.2
|-
| align="left" | 2017-18
| align="left" |Shibuya
| 23 || 3 || 9.48|| .327 || .324 || .857 || 0.7 || 0.3 || 0.26 || 0.0 || 2.3
|-
| align="left" | 2018-19
| align="left" |Shibuya
| 60 || 41 || 16.42|| .351 || .372 || .706 || 1.2 || 0.7 || 0.3 || 0.03 || 4.8
|-
Early cup games
|-
|style="text-align:left;"|2018
|style="text-align:left;"|Shibuya
| 3 || 1 || 23.03 || .276 || .100 || 1.000 || 1.7 || 0.3 || 0 || 0 ||7.7
|-
Personal
His mother is from Akita Prefecture. He is a nephew of Kimikazu Suzuki, a basketball head coach.
External links
References
1995 births
Living people
Japanese men's basketball players
Japan national 3x3 basketball team players
Basketball players from Tokyo
Sun Rockers Shibuya players
Small forwards |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mojm%C3%ADr%20Bo%C5%BE%C3%ADk | Mojmír Božík (born 26 February 1962) is a Slovak former ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1988 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
1962 births
Living people
Anglet Hormadi Élite players
Ducs de Dijon players
HK Dukla Michalovce players
HK Dukla Trenčín players
Ice hockey players at the 1988 Winter Olympics
Jokerit players
Kokkolan Hermes players
HC Košice players
MHk 32 Liptovský Mikuláš players
Mora IK players
Olympic ice hockey players for Czechoslovakia
HK Poprad players
HC Prešov players
Hockey Club de Reims players
Czechoslovak ice hockey defencemen
Slovak ice hockey defencemen
Ice hockey people from Liptovský Mikuláš
Edmonton Oilers draft picks |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radim%20Rad%C4%9Bvi%C4%8D | Radim Raděvič (born 16 December 1966) is a Czech ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1988 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
1966 births
Living people
Czech ice hockey forwards
Czechoslovak ice hockey forwards
HK Dukla Trenčín players
TuS Geretsried players
Heilbronner EC players
Ice hockey players at the 1988 Winter Olympics
EHC Klostersee players
HC Kometa Brno players
HC Olomouc players
Olympic ice hockey players for Czechoslovakia
HC Slezan Opava players
HC ZUBR Přerov players
Ice hockey people from Opava
VHK Vsetín players
PSG Berani Zlín players
Czechoslovak expatriate sportspeople in Germany
Czechoslovak expatriate ice hockey people
Czech expatriate ice hockey people
Czech expatriate sportspeople in Austria
Expatriate ice hockey players in Austria
Expatriate ice hockey players in Germany |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudolf%20Such%C3%A1nek | Rudolf Suchánek (born 27 January 1962) is a Czech ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1988 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
1962 births
Living people
Czech ice hockey defencemen
Olympic ice hockey players for Czechoslovakia
Ice hockey players at the 1988 Winter Olympics
Ice hockey people from České Budějovice
Calgary Flames draft picks
Motor České Budějovice players
Czechoslovak expatriate sportspeople in Italy
Czechoslovak ice hockey defencemen
Expatriate ice hockey players in Italy
Czechoslovak expatriate ice hockey people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rostislav%20Vlach | Rostislav Vlach (born 23 July 1962) is a former Czech professional ice hockey player. He competed for Czechoslovakia in the men's tournament at the 1988 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
1962 births
Czech ice hockey coaches
Czech ice hockey centres
Czechoslovak ice hockey centres
HC Dukla Jihlava players
Ice hockey players at the 1988 Winter Olympics
Living people
Los Angeles Kings draft picks
Olympic ice hockey players for Czechoslovakia
Sportspeople from Přerov
Ice hockey people from the Olomouc Region
PSG Berani Zlín players
VHK Vsetín players
Czechoslovak expatriate sportspeople in Finland
Czechoslovak expatriate ice hockey people
Czech expatriate ice hockey players in Slovakia
Czech expatriate ice hockey players in Germany |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petr%20Vlk | Petr Vlk (born 7 January 1964) is a former Czech professional ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1988 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
1964 births
Czech ice hockey right wingers
Czechoslovak expatriate sportspeople in Switzerland
Olympic ice hockey players for Czechoslovakia
HC Dukla Jihlava players
Ice hockey players at the 1988 Winter Olympics
Living people
New York Islanders draft picks
Ice hockey people from Havlíčkův Brod
SC Herisau players
HKM Zvolen players
Expatriate ice hockey players in Switzerland
Czechoslovak expatriate ice hockey people
Czechoslovak ice hockey right wingers |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tutte%E2%80%93Grothendieck%20invariant | In mathematics, a Tutte–Grothendieck (TG) invariant is a type of graph invariant that satisfies a generalized deletion–contraction formula. Any evaluation of the Tutte polynomial would be an example of a TG invariant.
Definition
A graph function f is TG-invariant if:
Above G / e denotes edge contraction whereas G \ e denotes deletion. The numbers c, x, y, a, b are parameters.
Generalization to matroids
The matroid function f is TG if:
It can be shown that f is given by:
where E is the edge set of M; r is the rank function; and
is the generalization of the Tutte polynomial to matroids.
Grothendieck group
The invariant is named after Alexander Grothendieck because of a similar construction of the Grothendieck group used in the Riemann–Roch theorem. For more details see:
References
Graph invariants |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas%20J.%20Laffey | Thomas J. Laffey (born December 1943) is an Irish mathematician known for his contributions to group theory and matrix theory. His entire career has been spent at University College Dublin (UCD), where he served two terms as head of the school of mathematics. While he formally retired in 2009, he remains active in research and publishing. The journal Linear Algebra and Its Applications had a special issue (April 2009) to mark his 65th birthday. He received the Hans Schneider Prize in 2013. In May 2019 at UCD, the International Conference on Linear Algebra and Matrix Theory held a celebration to honor Professor Laffey on his 75th birthday.
Education and career
Tom Laffey was born in Cross, County Mayo. His parents were farmers, and the family had no tradition of education. His own early schooling was entirely through the Irish language, and in mathematics and physics he was more or less self-taught. The technical books he had to study were in English, which at first he found challenging. Nobody at his school had attempted honours Leaving Cert maths before. However, he got one of the highest marks in the country in the 1961 Leaving Certificate mathematics examination, thereby earning a state scholarship to university.
He attended University College Galway, earning bachelor's (1964) and master's (1965) degrees in mathematical science and also winning a National University of Ireland Traveling Studentship Prize. In 1968 he was awarded the D.Phil. by the University of Sussex for a thesis on "Structure Theorems for Linear Groups" done under advisor Walter Ledermann.
He immediately joined the staff at University College Dublin, from which he officially retired in 2009, but he has continued to publish regularly. His research has focussed on group theory, and later linear algebra too, and he has supervised five Ph.D. students. He has also played a significant role in the establishment of the Irish Mathematical Olympiad, and had frequently served the BT Young Scientists Exhibition as a judge and reviewer.
Early in his career, he developed a strong interest in matrix theory, due to the influence of Olga Taussky-Todd, with whom he often corresponded. This was cemented by a 1972–3 sabbatical spent at Northern Illinois University.
He received the Hans Schneider Prize in 2013 in recognition of his constructive solution to the NIEP (Non-negative inverse eigenvalue problem) for non-zero spectra.
Selected publications
2018 "The Diagonalizable Nonnegative Inverse Eigenvalue Problem" (with Cronin, A.). Special Matrices, 6 (1) 273–281.
2015 "On a conjecture of Deveci and Karaduman". Linear Algebra and its Applications, Vol 471, 15 April 2015, Pages 569–574.
2012 "A constructive version of the Boyle–Handelman theorem on the spectra of nonnegative matrices". Linear Algebra Appl., Volume 436, Issue 6, 15 March 2012, pages 1701–1709.
2006 "Nonnegative realization of spectra having negative real parts" (with H. Šmigoc). Linear Algebra Appl., 416 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timo%20Peltomaa | Timo Peltomaa (born 26 July 1968) is a Finnish former professional ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1992 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
1968 births
Living people
Olympic ice hockey players for Finland
Ice hockey players at the 1992 Winter Olympics
People from Akaa
Ilves players
Augsburger Panther players
Frankfurt Lions players
Los Angeles Kings draft picks
Ice hockey people from Pirkanmaa |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timo%20Saarikoski | Timo Saarikoski (born 17 July 1969) is a Finnish ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1992 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
1969 births
Living people
Olympic ice hockey players for Finland
Ice hockey players at the 1992 Winter Olympics
People from Eura
Ice hockey people from Satakunta |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pascal%20Margerit | Pascal Margerit (born 12 February 1971) is a French ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1992 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
References
1971 births
Living people
Chamonix HC players
Diables Rouges de Briançon players
Drakkars de Caen players
HC Morzine-Avoriaz players
Les Aigles de Nice players
Olympic ice hockey players for France
Ours de Villard-de-Lans players
Ice hockey players at the 1992 Winter Olympics
People from Thonon-les-Bains
Sportspeople from Haute-Savoie |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert%20Ginnetti | Robert Anthony Ginnetti (born 31 July 1965) is a Canadian-born Italian ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1992 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
References
External links
1965 births
Living people
EC Bad Tölz players
ERC Ingolstadt players
GIJS Groningen players
HC Milano Saima players
Italian ice hockey players
Olympic ice hockey players for Italy
Ice hockey players at the 1992 Winter Olympics
Ice hockey people from Vancouver
Vancouver Bluehawks players
Burnaby Bluehawks players
New Westminster Bruins players
Seattle Breakers players
HC Alleghe players
Canadian sportspeople of Italian descent |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lars%20Edstr%C3%B6m%20%28ice%20hockey%29 | Lars Edström (born 16 July 1966) is a Swedish ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1992 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
1966 births
Living people
Olympic ice hockey players for Sweden
Ice hockey players at the 1992 Winter Olympics
People from Arvidsjaur Municipality
Minnesota North Stars draft picks
Luleå HF players
Ice hockey people from Norrbotten County |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter%20Ottosson | Peter Ottosson (born 4 September 1965) is a Swedish ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1992 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
1965 births
Living people
Swedish ice hockey players
Olympic ice hockey players for Sweden
Ice hockey players at the 1992 Winter Olympics
Ice hockey people from Västra Götaland County
Färjestad BK players
EHC Kloten players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert%20Hohenberger | Herbert Hohenberger (born 8 February 1969) is an Austrian ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournaments at the 1994 Winter Olympics and the 1998 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
1969 births
Living people
Austrian ice hockey players
Olympic ice hockey players for Austria
Ice hockey players at the 1994 Winter Olympics
Ice hockey players at the 1998 Winter Olympics
Sportspeople from Villach
Augsburger Panther players
EC VSV players
HC TWK Innsbruck players
Hull Olympiques players
Kölner Haie players
Sherbrooke Canadiens players
Fredericton Canadiens players
Peoria Rivermen (IHL) players
Austrian expatriate ice hockey people
Austrian expatriate sportspeople in Canada
Austrian expatriate sportspeople in the United States |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andreas%20Pusnik | Andreas Pusnik (born 7 September 1972) is an Austrian ice hockey player. He competed in the men's tournaments at the 1994 Winter Olympics and the 1998 Winter Olympics.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
1972 births
Living people
Olympic ice hockey players for Austria
Ice hockey players at the 1994 Winter Olympics
Ice hockey players at the 1998 Winter Olympics
Ice hockey people from Klagenfurt |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julia%20Gordon | Julia Gordon is a mathematician at the University of British Columbia whose research concerns algebraic geometry, including representation theory, -adic groups, motivic integration, and the Langlands program.
Gordon earned her PhD at the University of Michigan in 2003 under the supervision of Thomas C. Hales and Robert Griess. Her dissertation was Some Applications of Motivic Integration to the Representation Theory of P-adic Groups. After postdoctoral research at the University of Toronto and the Fields Institute, she joined the University of British Columbia faculty in 2006. , she is an associate professor there.
Awards
In 2017, Gordon won the Ruth I. Michler Memorial Prize of the Association for Women in Mathematics.
She is the 2019 winner of the Krieger–Nelson Prize of the Canadian Mathematical Society.
References
External links
Home page
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
Canadian mathematicians
Women mathematicians
University of Michigan alumni
Academic staff of the University of British Columbia |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris%20Soteros | Christine Elaine Soteros is a Canadian applied mathematician. She is professor and acting head of the department of mathematics and statistics at the University of Saskatchewan, and site director of the Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences for their Saskatchewan site. Her research involves the folding and packing behavior of DNA, proteins, and other string-like biomolecules, and the knot theory of random space curves.
Soteros graduated from the University of Windsor in 1980.
She completed her Ph.D. in chemical engineering at Princeton University in 1988. Her dissertation, Studies of Metal Hydride Phase Transitions Using the Cluster Variation Method, was supervised by Carol K. Hall. After postdoctoral research at the University of Toronto, working with Stuart Whittington and De Witt Sumners, she became a faculty member at the University of Saskatchewan in 1989.
References
External links
Home page
Canadian mathematicians
Women mathematicians
University of Windsor alumni
Princeton University alumni
Academic staff of the University of Saskatchewan
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian%20Marcus | Brian Marcus is an American-born mathematician who works in Canada. He is a professor in the department of mathematics at the University of British Columbia (UBC), where he is the site director of the Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences (PIMS), a fellow of the AMS and the IEEE. He was the department head of mathematics at UBC from 2002 to 2007 and the deputy director of PIMS from 2016 to 2018.
Education and academic career
Marcus earned his Ph.D. in 1975 from the University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley); his supervisor was Rufus Bowen.
He then worked as an IBM Watson Postdoctoral Fellow, an associate professor at UNC Chapel Hill and a researcher at IBM Research – Almaden. He additionally held visiting associate professor positions at UC Berkeley, University of California, Santa Cruz, and Stanford University. From 2016 to 2018, he was the deputy director of the Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences, where, as of 2019, he is the UBC Site Director. He is one of the representatives of the Pacific Rim Mathematical Association.
His main areas of research are ergodic theory, symbolic dynamics and information theory. He has published contributions in the theory of horocycle flows and entropy. Marcus has written over seventy research papers, some of them published in Annals of Mathematics, Inventiones Mathematicae and Journal of the AMS. His collaborators include Wolfgang Krieger, Roy Adler, Rufus Bowen, Dominique Perrin, Jack Wolf, Yuval Peres and Sheldon Newhouse. Marcus (with Doug Lind) wrote the book An Introduction to Symbolic Dynamics and Coding (currently with more than 3,000 citations on Google Scholar), and (with Susan Williams) the Scholarpedia article on symbolic dynamics.
In 1993, Marcus was awarded the Leonard J. Abraham Prize Paper award of the IEEE. In 1999, he was elected as a fellow of the IEEE. He was named a fellow of the American Mathematical Society in 2018; the citation was "For contributions to dynamical systems, symbolic dynamics and applications to data storage problems, and service to the profession."
Selected publications
Books
1995: (with Doug Lind) An Introduction to Symbolic Dynamics and Coding, Cambridge University Press .
Research papers
Ergodic properties of horocycle flows for surfaces of negative curvature, Annals of Mathematics 105 (1977), 81-105 .
with Rufus Bowen: Unique ergodicity of horocycle foliations, Israel Journal of Mathematics 26 (1977) 43-67 .
The horocycle flow is mixing of all degrees, Inventiones Mathematicae 46 (1978)201-209
with Roy Adler: Topological entropy and equivalence of dynamical systems, Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society 219 (1979) .
Topological conjugacy of horocycle flows, American Journal of Mathematics (1983) 623-632
with Selim Tuncel: Entropy at a weight-per-symbol and an imbedding theorem for Markov chains, Inventiones Mathematicae 102 (1990), 235-266 .
with Selim Tuncel: Matrices of polynomials, positivity, and finite |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prema%20Murthy | Prema Murthy (born 1969 in Seattle, WA) is an American, multi-disciplinary artist based in New York. Employing aesthetics, gesture, geometry and algorithmic processes, Murthy's work explores the boundaries between embodiment and abstraction, while engaging in issues of culture and politics. Her work has been exhibited nationally and internationally at MoMA PS1, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the New Museum of Contemporary Art, the Reina Sofia Museum, the Generali Foundation in Vienna, and the India Habitat Center-New Delhi.
Education
Murthy received a BA in Art History and Women's Studies from the University of Texas, Austin and MFA from Goldsmiths College, London.
Career
Murthy's early digital art works from the 1990s - such as Bindigirl and Mythic Hybrid - are considered pioneering examples of internet art from a feminist perspective. These works explored the intersections of gender, race, and technology, while also utilizing the then-emerging tools of streaming media as a platform for performance art. These works contributed to the cyberfeminist art movement, while also drawing inspiration from postcolonial studies and feminist science fiction. In 2015 Murthy's work Bindigirl was included in the group retrospective "Come As You Are: Art of the 1990s".
In the 1990s Murthy also co-founded Fakeshop, an art collective that used early video conferencing technologies, interactive video and music software, and digital animation to create large scale performative installations. Fakeshop presented its work at venues such as Ars Electronica and SIGGRAPH, and was included in the 2000 Whitney Biennial, the first major American museum to include Internet art as a special category in its exhibition.
Murthy's recent work includes the use of 3D modeling tools to create large scale drawings, digital prints, and installation. These works make reference to the art of Futurism, Minimalism, and the Baroque. Her 2008 solo exhibit "Fuzzy Logic" at MoMA PS1 included a number of abstract, wireframe drawings as well as a room-sized installation of black yarn produced with the aid of 3D software. In 2010 Murthy used these techniques for her animated short "Monster," produced in collaboration with singer/songwriter Miho Hatori.
She has taught Digital Art at City College (CUNY) and Sarah Lawrence College, NY.
See also
Cyberfeminism
Feminist art
Internet art
New media art
Performance art
References
External links
Prema Murthy site
Fuzzy Logic exhibit, MoMA PS1
Artists from Brooklyn
American people of Filipino descent
American people of Indian descent
Internet art |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematics%20of%20artificial%20neural%20networks | An artificial neural network (ANN) combines biological principles with advanced statistics to solve problems in domains such as pattern recognition and game-play. ANNs adopt the basic model of neuron analogues connected to each other in a variety of ways.
Structure
Neuron
A neuron with label receiving an input from predecessor neurons consists of the following components:
an activation , the neuron's state, depending on a discrete time parameter,
an optional threshold , which stays fixed unless changed by learning,
an activation function that computes the new activation at a given time from , and the net input giving rise to the relation
and an output function computing the output from the activation
Often the output function is simply the identity function.
An input neuron has no predecessor but serves as input interface for the whole network. Similarly an output neuron has no successor and thus serves as output interface of the whole network.
Propagation function
The propagation function computes the input to the neuron from the outputs and typically has the form
Bias
A bias term can be added, changing the form to the following:
where is a bias.
Neural networks as functions
Neural network models can be viewed as defining a function that takes an input (observation) and produces an output (decision) or a distribution over or both and . Sometimes models are intimately associated with a particular learning rule. A common use of the phrase "ANN model" is really the definition of a class of such functions (where members of the class are obtained by varying parameters, connection weights, or specifics of the architecture such as the number of neurons, number of layers or their connectivity).
Mathematically, a neuron's network function is defined as a composition of other functions , that can further be decomposed into other functions. This can be conveniently represented as a network structure, with arrows depicting the dependencies between functions. A widely used type of composition is the nonlinear weighted sum, where , where (commonly referred to as the activation function) is some predefined function, such as the hyperbolic tangent, sigmoid function, softmax function, or rectifier function. The important characteristic of the activation function is that it provides a smooth transition as input values change, i.e. a small change in input produces a small change in output. The following refers to a collection of functions as a vector .
This figure depicts such a decomposition of , with dependencies between variables indicated by arrows. These can be interpreted in two ways.
The first view is the functional view: the input is transformed into a 3-dimensional vector , which is then transformed into a 2-dimensional vector , which is finally transformed into . This view is most commonly encountered in the context of optimization.
The second view is the probabilistic view: the random variable depends upo |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mich%C3%A8le%20Sebag | Martine-Michèle Sebag is a French computer scientist, primarily focused on machine learning. She has over 6,000 citations.
Biography
Sebag studied mathematics at the Ecole Normale Supérieure, and later worked in the computer science industry, starting at Thomson Corporation, where she was introduced to artificial intelligence. She then moved into the research field, at the Laboratoire de Mécanique des Solides at Ecole Polytechnique.
She was awarded a PhD from the University of Paris-Sud, Paris Dauphine University and Ecole Polytechnique. Sebag started work at the Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) as a research fellow in 1991.
Sebag is deputy director of the Laboratoire de Recherche en Informatique at the CNRS; Head of group A-O at the latter; co-head of Projet TAO at INRIA Saclay; and principal scientist at the CNRS.
She was named chevalier of the Légion d'honneur in 2019.
Selected research
Gelly, Sylvain, et al. "The grand challenge of computer Go: Monte Carlo tree search and extensions." Communications of the ACM 55.3 (2012): 106–113.
Bordes, Antoine, Léon Bottou, and Patrick Gallinari. "SGD-QN: Careful quasi-Newton stochastic gradient descent." Journal of Machine Learning Research 10.Jul (2009): 1737–1754.
Termier, Alexandre, M-C. Rousset, and Michèle Sebag. "Treefinder: a first step towards xml data mining." 2002 IEEE International Conference on Data Mining, 2002. Proceedings.. IEEE, 2002.
Sebag, Michèle, and Antoine Ducoulombier. "Extending population-based incremental learning to continuous search spaces." International Conference on Parallel Problem Solving from Nature. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, 1998.
Further reading
José L. Balcázar; Francesco Bonchi; Aristides Gionis; 2010. Machine Learning and Knowledge Discovery in Databases: European Conference, ECML PKDD 2010, Barcelona, Spain, September 20–24, 2010. Proceedings. Springer. .
References
External links
article by Sebag in Le Monde
Living people
French women computer scientists
Écoles Normales Supérieures
University of Paris alumni
Knights of the Legion of Honour
Year of birth missing (living people)
Date of birth missing (living people)
Place of birth missing (living people)
Research directors of the French National Centre for Scientific Research |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorothy%20Wallace | Dorothy Irene Wallace Andreoli is an American number theorist, mathematical biologist, and mathematics educator. She is a professor of mathematics at Dartmouth College.
Education
Wallace is a graduate of Yale University. She completed her Ph.D. in 1982 at the University of California, San Diego. Her dissertation, Selberg's Trace Formula and Units in Higher Degree Number Fields, concerned number theory and was supervised by Audrey Terras.
Contributions
Wallace is the author or co-author of books including:
Applications of Calculus to Biology and Medicine: Case Studies from Lake Victoria (with Nathan Ryan, World Scientific, 2017)
The Bell That Rings Light: A Primer in Quantum Mechanics and Chemical Bonding (with Joseph BelBruno, World Scientific, 2006)
With art curator Kathy Hart, Wallace co-curated the exhibit "Visual Proof: the Experience of Mathematics in Art" at Dartmouth's Hood Museum of Art in 1999.
With mathematics colleague Marcia Groszek and performance artist Josh Kornbluth, Wallace has also helped write and produce a sequence of educational videos about mathematics.
Recognition
Wallace was named New Hampshire CASE Professor of the Year in 2000.
In 2019 the Dartmouth Alumni Association gave Wallace their Rassias Award for educational outreach to alumni, for her 15 years of work giving mathematics lectures on Dartmouth alumni travel excursions.
References
External links
Home page
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
20th-century American mathematicians
21st-century American mathematicians
American women mathematicians
Yale University alumni
University of California, San Diego alumni
Dartmouth College faculty
Number theorists
20th-century American women
21st-century American women |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosa%20Orellana | Rosa C. Orellana is an American mathematician specializing in algebraic combinatorics and representation theory. She is a professor of mathematics at Dartmouth College.
Early life and education
Orellana's excitement for mathematics was recognized early, by one of her elementary school teachers. She is a graduate of California State University, Los Angeles, and was the first in her family to earn a college degree. Her undergraduate education also included summer research with Kenneth Millett at the University of California, Santa Barbara on knot theory and its applications to biomolecules.
She completed her Ph.D. in 1999 at the University of California, San Diego. Originally intending to continue her study of knot theory, she shifted to algebraic combinatorics after the knot theorist she planned to work with went on leave. Her dissertation, The Hecke Algebra of Type B at Roots of Unity, Markov Traces and Subfactors, was supervised by Hans Wenzl.
Career
After completing her doctorate, Orellana became a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California, San Diego, supported by a University of California President's Postdoctoral Fellowship, before joining Dartmouth as a Wilson Foundation Fellow in 2000.
At Dartmouth, she won the John M. Manley Huntington Memorial Award for outstanding research by a newly tenured faculty member, helped found the Dartmouth chapter of the Association for Women in Mathematics, and founded a sequence of Sonia Kovalevsky Math days to encourage local school girls to continue in mathematics. She serves on the Scientific Advisory Board for the Institute for Computational and Experimental Research in Mathematics (ICERM).
Orellana was a former Council member at large for the American Mathematical Society (AMS) from 2020 to 2022.
References
External links
Home page
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
21st-century American mathematicians
American women mathematicians
California State University, Los Angeles alumni
University of California, San Diego alumni
Dartmouth College faculty
21st-century American women |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tapas%20Roy | Tapas Roy is an Indian politician. He is currently Minister of State for Planning and Statistics in West Bengal, India. He was elected as a legislator of the West Bengal Legislative Assembly in 2001, 2011, 2016 and 2021. He is an All India Trinamool Congress politician.
References
Trinamool Congress politicians from West Bengal
Living people
West Bengal MLAs 2001–2006
West Bengal MLAs 2011–2016
West Bengal MLAs 2016–2021
1956 births
West Bengal MLAs 1996–2001
Indian National Congress politicians from West Bengal
West Bengal MLAs 2021–2026 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toshiya%20Omi | is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a defender for YSCC Yokohama.
Career statistics
Club
.
Notes
References
External links
1995 births
Living people
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
J3 League players
YSCC Yokohama players
Sportspeople from Saitama Prefecture |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiroto%20Sakai | is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Ococias Kyoto.
Career statistics
Club
.
Notes
References
External links
1989 births
Living people
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Japan Football League players
J3 League players
Japan Soccer College players
SP Kyoto FC players
ReinMeer Aomori players
Vanraure Hachinohe players
Ococias Kyoto AC players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosei%20Nukina | is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Vanraure Hachinohe.
Career statistics
Club
.
Notes
References
External links
1995 births
Living people
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
J3 League players
Vanraure Hachinohe players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mallal%20N%27Diaye | Mallal N'Diaye (born 4 January 1971) is a retired Malian football striker.
Career statistics
International
Statistics accurate as of match played 10 October 2004
References
1971 births
Living people
Malian men's footballers
Mali men's international footballers
FC Pyunik players
FC Yerevan players
FC Lausanne-Sport players
Djoliba AC players
Men's association football forwards
Malian expatriate men's footballers
Expatriate men's footballers in Armenia
Malian expatriate sportspeople in Armenia
Expatriate men's footballers in Switzerland
Malian expatriate sportspeople in Switzerland
21st-century Malian people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuichi%20Sakai | is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a defender for Thespakusatsu Gunma.
Career statistics
Club
.
Notes
References
External links
1996 births
Living people
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
J2 League players
J3 League players
Roasso Kumamoto players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hayato%20Nishinoue | is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a defender for Verspah Oita.
Career statistics
Club
.
Notes
References
External links
1996 births
Living people
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Japan Football League players
J3 League players
FC Imabari players
Fujieda MYFC players
Verspah Oita players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryuto%20Kito | is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Suzuka Point Getters.
Career statistics
Club
.
Notes
References
External links
1998 births
Living people
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
J3 League players
Giravanz Kitakyushu players
Suzuka Point Getters players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuga%20Arai | is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Okinawa SV.
Career statistics
Club
.
Notes
References
External links
1999 births
Living people
Association football people from Yamagata Prefecture
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
J2 League players
Tochigi SC players
Okinawa SV players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yutaro%20Hakamata | is a Japanese professional footballer who plays as a left back for J.League club Omiya Ardija, on loan from Júbilo Iwata.
Club statistics
References
External links
Profile at Júbilo Iwata
1996 births
Living people
Association football people from Shizuoka Prefecture
Meiji University alumni
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
J1 League players
J2 League players
Júbilo Iwata players
Yokohama FC players
Omiya Ardija players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kim%20Min-ho%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201997%29 | Kim Min-ho (; born 11 June 1997) is a South Korean footballer currently playing as a defender for Ansan Greeners.
Club statistics
.
Notes
References
1997 births
Living people
South Korean men's footballers
South Korea men's youth international footballers
Men's association football defenders
K League 1 players
Suwon Samsung Bluewings players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shunsuke%20Fukuda%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201999%29 | is a Japanese footballer.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
Living people
1999 births
Association football people from Saitama Prefecture
Japanese men's footballers
Japanese expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Singapore Premier League players
Japan Soccer College players
Albirex Niigata Singapore FC players
Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Singapore
Expatriate men's footballers in Singapore |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamu%20Tasaka | is a Japanese footballer.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
Living people
1999 births
Association football people from Hyōgo Prefecture
Japanese men's footballers
Japanese expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Singapore Premier League players
Japan Soccer College players
Albirex Niigata Singapore FC players
Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Singapore
Expatriate men's footballers in Singapore |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiroya%20Kiyomoto | is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Lithuanian side FK Šilas.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
Living people
1996 births
Japanese men's footballers
Japanese expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Serbian First League players
Shonan Bellmare players
FK Zlatibor Čajetina players
Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Montenegro
Expatriate men's footballers in Montenegro
Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Serbia
Expatriate men's footballers in Serbia |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryo%20Tachibana | is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Arsenal Tivat.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
1996 births
Living people
Association football people from Osaka Prefecture
Osaka Sangyo University alumni
Japanese men's footballers
Japanese expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Montenegrin Second League players
FK Zlatibor Čajetina players
Serbian First League players
Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Serbia
Expatriate men's footballers in Serbia
Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Montenegro
Expatriate men's footballers in Montenegro |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shotaro%20Okada | is a former Japanese footballer.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
Living people
1996 births
Japanese men's footballers
Japanese expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Moldovan Super Liga players
II liga players
CSF Bălți players
Skonto FC players
Bruk-Bet Termalica Nieciecza players
Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Moldova
Expatriate men's footballers in Moldova
Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Latvia
Expatriate men's footballers in Latvia
Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Poland
Expatriate men's footballers in Poland |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calculus%20on%20finite%20weighted%20graphs | In mathematics, calculus on finite weighted graphs is a discrete calculus for functions whose domain is the vertex set of a graph with a finite number of vertices and weights associated to the edges. This involves formulating discrete operators on graphs which are analogous to differential operators in calculus, such as graph Laplacians (or discrete Laplace operators) as discrete versions of the Laplacian, and using these operators to formulate differential equations, difference equations, or variational models on graphs which can be interpreted as discrete versions of partial differential equations or continuum variational models. Such equations and models are important tools to mathematically model, analyze, and process discrete information in many different research fields, e.g., image processing, machine learning, and network analysis.
In applications, finite weighted graphs represent a finite number of entities by the graph's vertices, any pairwise relationships between these entities by graph edges, and the significance of a relationship by an edge weight function. Differential equations or difference equations on such graphs can be employed to leverage the graph's structure for tasks such as image segmentation (where the vertices represent pixels and the weighted edges encode pixel similarity based on comparisons of Moore neighborhoods or larger windows), data clustering, data classification, or community detection in a social network (where the vertices represent users of the network, the edges represent links between users, and the weight function indicates the strength of interactions between users).
The main advantage of finite weighted graphs is that by not being restricted to highly regular structures such as discrete regular grids, lattice graphs, or meshes, they can be applied to represent abstract data with irregular interrelationships.
If a finite weighted graph is geometrically embedded in a Euclidean space, i.e., the graph vertices represent points of this space, then it can be interpreted as a discrete approximation of a related nonlocal operator in the continuum setting.
Basic definitions
A finite weighted graph is defined as a triple for which
, is a finite set of indices denoted as graph vertices or nodes,
is a finite set of (directed) graph edges connecting a subset of vertices,
is an edge weight function defined on the edges of the graph.
In a directed graph, each edge has a start node and an end node . In an undirected graph for every edge there exists an edge and the weight function is required to be symmetric, i.e., . On the remainder of this page, the graphs will be assumed to be undirected, unless specifically stated otherwise. Many of the ideas presented on this page can be generalized to directed graphs.
The edge weight function associates to every edge a real value . For both mathematical and application specific reasons, the weight function on the edges is often required to be strictly positi |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrey%20Rublev%20career%20statistics | This is a list of main career statistics of Russian professional tennis player Andrey Rublev. All statistics are according to the ATP World Tour and ITF websites.
Performance timelines
Singles
Current through the 2023 Shanghai Masters.
Doubles
Significant finals
Olympic finals
Mixed doubles: 1 (1 Gold medal)
ATP Masters 1000
Singles: 4 (1 title, 3 runner-ups)
Doubles: 4 (1 title, 3 runner-ups)
ATP career finals
Singles: 23 (14 titles, 9 runner-ups)
Doubles: 7 (4 titles, 3 runner-ups)
ATP Next Generation finals
Singles: 1 (1 runner-up)
ATP Challenger & ITF Future finals
Singles: 10 (5–5)
Doubles: 5 (3–2)
ITF Junior Circuit
Junior Grand Slam finals
Singles: 1 (1 title)
Doubles: 1 (1 runner-up)
Youth Olympic medal matches
Singles: 1 (1 bronze medal)
Doubles: 1 (1 silver medal)
National and international participation
Team competitions finals: 3 (2 titles, 1 runner-up)
{|
|- valign=top
|
Davis Cup (20–10)
indicates the outcome of the Davis Cup match followed by the score, date, place of event, the zonal classification and its phase, and the court surface.
Laver Cup (3–3)
ATP Cup (4–1)
Record against other players
Record against top-10 players
Rublev's record against those who have been ranked in the top 10, with active players in boldface.
|-bgcolor=efefef class="sortbottom"
|align=left|Number 1 ranked players||colspan=9|
|-bgcolor=efefef class="sortbottom"
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|-bgcolor=efefef class="sortbottom"
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|-bgcolor=efefef class="sortbottom"
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|-bgcolor=efefef class="sortbottom"
|align=left|Number 5 ranked players||colspan=9|
|-bgcolor=efefef class="sortbottom"
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|-bgcolor=efefef class="sortbottom"
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|-bgcolor=efefef class="sortbottom"
|align=left|Number 8 ranked players||colspan=9|
|-bgcolor=efefef class="sortbottom"
|align=left|Number 9 ranked players||colspan=9|
|-bgcolor=efefef class="sortbottom"
|align=left|Number 10 ranked players||colspan=9|
Wins over top 10 players
He has a record against players who were, at the time the match was played, ranked in the top 10.
*
Grand Slam seedings
*
ATP Tour career earnings
* Statistics correct .
Exhibitions
Tournament finals
Singles (7 titles, 1 runner-up)
References
Notes
External links
Tennis career statistics |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonlocal%20operator | In mathematics, a nonlocal operator is a mapping which maps functions on a topological space to functions, in such a way that the value of the output function at a given point cannot be determined solely from the values of the input function in any neighbourhood of any point. An example of a nonlocal operator is the Fourier transform.
Formal definition
Let be a topological space, a set, a function space containing functions with domain , and a function space containing functions with domain . Two functions and in are called equivalent at if there exists a neighbourhood of such that for all . An operator is said to be local if for every there exists an such that for all functions and in which are equivalent at . A nonlocal operator is an operator which is not local.
For a local operator it is possible (in principle) to compute the value using only knowledge of the values of in an arbitrarily small neighbourhood of a point . For a nonlocal operator this is not possible.
Examples
Differential operators are examples of local operators. A large class of (linear) nonlocal operators is given by the integral transforms, such as the Fourier transform and the Laplace transform. For an integral transform of the form
where is some kernel function, it is necessary to know the values of almost everywhere on the support of in order to compute the value of at .
An example of a singular integral operator is the fractional Laplacian
The prefactor involves the Gamma function and serves as a normalizing factor. The fractional Laplacian plays a role in, for example, the study of nonlocal minimal surfaces.
Applications
Some examples of applications of nonlocal operators are:
Time series analysis using Fourier transformations
Analysis of dynamical systems using Laplace transformations
Image denoising using non-local means
Modelling Gaussian blur or motion blur in images using convolution with a blurring kernel or point spread function
See also
Fractional calculus
Linear map
Nonlocal Lagrangian
Action at a distance
References
External links
Nonlocal equations wiki
Mathematical analysis
Functions and mappings |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin%20Petkov%20%28footballer%2C%20born%202001%29 | Martin Petkov (; born 15 January 2001) is a Bulgarian footballer who plays as a winger.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
Profile at Levskisofia.info
Profile at Etarvt.bg
Living people
2001 births
Bulgarian men's footballers
Bulgaria men's youth international footballers
PFC Levski Sofia players
FC Lokomotiv Gorna Oryahovitsa players
FC Kariana Erden players
SFC Etar Veliko Tarnovo players
FC Dunav Ruse players
FC Minyor Pernik players
First Professional Football League (Bulgaria) players
Men's association football forwards
Footballers from Sofia |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yousef%20Al-Shammari | Yousef Al-Mozairib Al-Shammari (, born 9 December 1997) is a Saudi Arabian professional footballer who plays as a winger for SPL side Al-Hazem.
Career statistics
Club
Honours
Al-Batin
MS League: 2019–20
References
External links
1997 births
Living people
Saudi Arabian men's footballers
Arar FC players
Al Batin FC players
Al-Hazem F.C. players
Saudi Pro League players
Saudi First Division League players
Men's association football forwards |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert%20Kass | Robert E. Kass is the Maurice Falk Professor of Statistics and Computational Neuroscience in the Department of Statistics and Data Science, the Machine Learning Department, and the Neuroscience Institute at Carnegie Mellon University.
Early life and education
Born in Boston, Massachusetts (1952), Kass earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in mathematics from Antioch College, and a PhD degree in Statistics from the University of Chicago in 1980, where his advisor was Stephen Stigler. Kass is the son of the late Harvard medical researcher Edward H. Kass and stepson of the late Amalie M. Kass. His sister is the bioethicist, Nancy Kass.
Research and publications
Kass's early research was on differential geometry in statistics, which formed the basis for his book Geometrical Foundations of Asymptotic Inference (with Paul Vos), and on Bayesian methods. Since 2000 his research has focused on statistical methods in neuroscience.
Kass's best-known work includes a comprehensive re-evaluation of Bayesian hypothesis testing and model selection,
and the selection of prior distributions,
the relationship of Bayes and Empirical Bayes methods, Bayesian asymptotics,
the application of point process statistical models to neural spiking data,
the challenges of multiple spike train analysis,
the state-space approach to brain-computer interface, and the brain's apparent ability to solve the credit assignment problem during brain-controlled robotic movement. Kass's book Analysis of Neural Data (with Emery Brown and Uri Eden) was published in 2014.
Kass has also written on statistics education and the use of statistics, including the articles, "What is Statistics?", "Statistical Inference: The Big Picture," and "Ten Simple Rules for Effective Statistical Practice".
Professional and administrative activities
Kass has served Chair of the Section for Bayesian Statistical Science of the American Statistical Association, Chair of the Statistics Section of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, founding Editor-in-Chief of Bayesian Analysis (journal), and Executive Editor (editor-in-chief) of the international review journal Statistical Science. At Carnegie Mellon University he was Department Head of Statistics from 1995 to 2004 and Interim Co-director of the joint CMU-University of Pittsburgh Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition 2015–2018.
Honors
Kass is an elected Fellow of the American Statistical Association, the Institute of Mathematical Statistics, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and an elected member of the National Academy of Sciences. For his work on statistical modeling of neural synchrony, in 2013 he received the Outstanding Statistical Application Award from the American Statistical Association, and in 2017 he received the R.A. Fisher Award and Lectureship, now known as the COPSS Distinguished Achievement Award and Lectureship, from the Committee of Presidents of Statistical Societies.
References
Living |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobias-Pascal%20Schultz | Tobias-Pascal Schultz (*25 June 1995) is a German sprint canoeist.
Career
He won a medal at the 2019 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships.
Life
Tobias-Pascal Schultz is studying mathematics and sports at the University of Wuppertal. He lives and trains in Essen, together with other canoeists like Max Hoff or Max Rendschmidt. His Grandfather is Karl-Heinz Weißenfels.
References
External links
1995 births
Living people
German male canoeists
ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships medalists in kayak
Sportspeople from Essen |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marta%20Civil | Marta Civil is an American mathematics educator. Her research involves understanding the cultural background of minority schoolchildren, particularly Hispanic and Latina/o students in the Southwestern United States, and using that understanding to promote parent engagement and focus mathematics teaching on students' individual strengths. She is the Roy F. Graesser Endowed Professor at the University of Arizona, where she holds appointments in the department of mathematics, the department of mathematics education, and the department of teaching, learning, and sociocultural studies.
Education and career
Civil earned her Ph.D. at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign in 1990. Her dissertation, Doing and Talking about Mathematics: A Study of Preservice Elementary Teachers, was supervised by Peter George Braunfeld. In 2011 she moved from the University of Arizona to the University of North Carolina, to become Frank A. Daniels Distinguished Professor of Mathematics Education, but returned to Arizona in 2014 to become the Graesser Professor.
Books
Civil is co-editor of the books Transnational and Borderland Studies in Mathematics Education (Routledge, 2011), Latinos/as and Mathematics Education: Research on Learning and Teaching in Classrooms and Communities (Information Age, 2011), Cases for Mathematics Teacher Educators: Facilitating Conversations about Inequities in Mathematics Classrooms (Information Age, 2016), and Access & Equity: Promoting High-Quality Mathematics in Grades 3-5 (National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, 2018).
Recognition
In 2013 TODOS: Mathematics for All gave Civil their Iris M. Carl Equity and Leadership Award.
She is included in a deck of playing cards featuring notable women mathematicians published by the Association of Women in Mathematics. She received the 2021 National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) Lifetime Achievement Award.
References
External links
Home page
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
20th-century American mathematicians
21st-century American mathematicians
American women mathematicians
Mathematics educators
University of Arizona faculty
University of North Carolina faculty
20th-century American women
21st-century American women
University of Illinois College of Liberal Arts and Sciences alumni |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karen%20Marrongelle | Karen Ann Marrongelle is an American mathematics educator specializing in collaborative learning in undergraduate-level mathematics education. Formerly the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Portland State University, in 2018 she became the head of the Directorate for Education and Human Resources at the National Science Foundation.
Education and career
Marrongelle attended Allentown Central Catholic High School in Allentown, Pennsylvania. She is a 1995 graduate of Albright College, where she majored in mathematics and also served on the executive board of Albright's radio station, WXAC. After earning a master's degree in mathematics at Lehigh University in 1997, she completed her doctorate in mathematics education at the University of New Hampshire. Her dissertation was Physics experiences and calculus: How students use physics to construct meaningful conceptualizations of calculus concepts in an interdisciplinary calculus/physics course.
In 2001, Marrongelle became a faculty member in the department of mathematics and statistics at Portland State University. She took a leave from Portland State to work at the National Science Foundation from 2007 to 2009. At Portland State, she was assistant vice chancellor for academic standards, vice chancellor for academic strategies, and interim dean of liberal arts and sciences. In 2015, she was appointed dean. As dean, she led a proposal to eliminate Portland State's language programs in Ancient Greek, Swahili, Korean and Vietnamese.
Publications and service
With Ping Li, Marrongelle is the author of the book Having Success with NSF: A Practical Guide (Wiley, 2013).
In 2015, Marongelle became one of the three founding editors-in-chief of the Springer mathematics education journal International Journal of Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education, a post she held until 2019.
References
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
20th-century American mathematicians
21st-century American mathematicians
Allentown Central Catholic High School alumni
American women mathematicians
Mathematics educators
Albright College alumni
Lehigh University alumni
University of New Hampshire alumni
Portland State University faculty
20th-century American women
21st-century American women |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adele%20Cutler | Adele Cutler is a statistician known as one of the developers of archetypal analysis and of the random forest technique for ensemble learning.
She is a professor of mathematics and statistics at Utah State University.
Early life and education
Originally from England, Cutler moved to New Zealand as a child, and studied mathematics at the University of Waikato and the University of Auckland. She met her husband, statistician Richard Cutler, at the University of Auckland; the couple both went on to graduate study in statistics at the University of California, Berkeley, where she earned a master's degree in 1984 and completed her doctorate in 1988.
Her dissertation, Optimization Methods in Statistics, was supervised by Leo Breiman. Her doctoral work with Breiman concerned mathematical optimization techniques in statistics, and introduced archetypal analysis.
Career
After completing her doctorate she joined the faculty at Utah State University in 1988. Her initial research there concerned mixture models, but shifted towards neural networks in the mid-1990s and from there to random decision trees, the basis of the random forest technique.
References
External links
Home page
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
American women statisticians
English statisticians
New Zealand statisticians
University of Waikato alumni
University of Auckland alumni
UC Berkeley College of Letters and Science alumni
Utah State University faculty
21st-century American women |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yewande%20Olubummo | Yewande Olubummo (born February 8, 1960) is a Nigerian-American mathematician whose research interests include functional analysis and dynamical systems. She is an associate professor of mathematics at Spelman College, where she served as chair of the mathematics department from 2006 to 2010. She is a member of the National Association of Mathematicians, as well as the Mathematical Association of America.
Early life and education
Olubummo is originally from Ibadan in Nigeria, and is the oldest of three children of mathematician Adegoke Olubummo and hospital administrator Edak Olubummo; her father was the second Nigerian to earn a doctorate in mathematics. As a child, she was educated at the staff school of the University of Ibadan, where her father taught, and then at the International School Ibadan on the university campus.
She earned a bachelor's degree with first class honours in mathematics from the University of Ibadan in 1980, and did her compulsory national service in the National Youth Service Corps as a mathematics teacher in Keffi.
On the advice of her father Olubummo moved abroad for graduate study, choosing Yale University over the University of Oxford (to which she was also admitted) because of its financial assistance. She felt alone, isolated, and the victim of racial discrimination at Yale; she did poorly on her doctoral exams, and ended up leaving in 1983 with a master's degree. At the suggestion of a visiting African-American mathematics professor, Donald F. St. Mary, she transferred to the University of Massachusetts Amherst, where she completed her doctorate eight years later in 1991. Her dissertation, Measures on Empirical Logics and the Properties of Their Associated Dual Banach Spaces, was supervised by Thurlow Cook.
Career
While working towards her doctorate, Olubummo taught mathematics at Smith College. There, in 1991, she met Sylvia Bozeman, who had been visiting Smith as part of an academic audit of the Smith mathematics department. On Bozeman's recommendation, she took a position as a lecturer at Spelman College, and in 2000 she was promoted to associate professor. She served as chair of the mathematics department at Spelman from 2006 to 2010. In 2009, she was awarded the Spelman College Presidential Award for Teaching Excellence, whilst in 2018 she was awarded the Carnegie Foundation Africa Diaspora Fellowship, allowing her to run a graduate level course in functional analysis at Kwara State University, Ilorin. She is currently a faculty member of the National Alliance for Doctoral Studies in the Mathematical Sciences, an organisation which aims to improve representation of minorities in Mathematics.
Beyond her research, Olubummo is interested in increasing the participation of underrepresented groups in mathematics both in the US and in Nigeria. At Spelman, she led a National Science Foundation funded program, the Math Research and Mentoring Program, to encourage minority undergraduates in mathematics to go on to |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nkechi%20Agwu | Nkechi Madonna Adeleine Agwu (born October 8, 1962) is a mathematics teacher. Agwu is a naturalized American citizen, tenured faculty at the Borough of Manhattan Community College, part of the City University of New York, and was a director of the college's Center for Excellence in Teaching, Learning and Scholarship.
Early life
Agwu was born in Enugu, Nigeria, the daughter of two teachers; Jacob Ukeje Agwu from Nigeria, and Europa Lauretta Durosimi Wilson, from Sierra Leone. In the Nigerian Civil War, her family supported the Biafran side, their home in Umuahia was damaged by Nigerian bombers. In 1968, Agwu, her mother, and her siblings left Nigeria on the final evacuation plane taking Biafrans to a refugee camp in Equatorial Guinea, and were moved from there to camps in Liberia and Sierra Leone. They left the refugee camps for her grandmother's house in Sierra Leone, but it had burned down, leaving them homeless. Most of her family returned to Nigeria after the end of the war in 1970, rejoining Agwu's father who had left the government service to become a farmer. Agwu stayed behind in Freetown, Sierra Leone as a student at the Fourah Bay College Primary School and then at the Annie Walsh Memorial School.
Education
In 1980, Agwu returned to Nigeria. She studied mathematics at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, earning a bachelor's degree with honours in 1984. On the recommendation of two of her university teachers, James O. C. Ezeilo and Isabelle Adjaero, she went to the University of Connecticut for graduate study, the same university where Adjaero earned her PhD. Agwu started her studies there in 1987, after working as a government statistician and as a lecturer at Kaduna Polytechnic. Her start at the University of Connecticut was delayed as she spent a few years lecturing at Kaduna Polytechnic. Agwu was not able to attend at first due to lack of finance but, her studies were funded by a Mathematical Association of America travel award and an award to fund the study of the uses of the history of mathematics in teaching.
Agwu completed a master's degree in mathematics at the University of Connecticut in 1989. She moved to the Syracuse University, where she completed her Ph.D. in mathematics education in 1995. Her dissertation, Using a Computer Laboratory Setting to Teach College Calculus, was supervised by Howard Cornelius Johnson. At Syracuse, her course of studies also included gender studies and multicultural education, and she was president of the African Students Union and of the Association of International Students.
Career and contributions
Agwu was appointed Coordinator of the Teaching and Learning Center at the Borough of Manhattan Community College.
In 2009, Agwu served a term as New York City branch president of the American Association of University Women, with an agenda of encouraging girls and women in STEM fields and of improving health in minority communities. In 2014 she returned to Nigeria on a visit sponsored by a Carneg |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diane%20Henderson | Diane Marie Henderson is an American applied mathematician, specializing in fluid dynamics and mathematical oceanography. Unusually for a mathematics professor, some of her research involves physical experiments with wave tanks, high speed cameras, and oil droplets.
Henderson earned her Ph.D. in physical oceanography from the University of California, San Diego in 1990. Her dissertation, Faraday Waves, was supervised by John W. Miles.
She is a professor of mathematics at Pennsylvania State University and one of two faculty members leading the William G. Pritchard Fluid Mechanics Laboratory at Pennsylvania State University.
Henderson is a 1992 Packard Foundation Fellow.
She was awarded a Sloan Research Fellowship in 1996.
References
External links
Home page
My Career in Modeling, The Actual Life of Pi (blog post by a student about Henderson's research)
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
20th-century American mathematicians
21st-century American mathematicians
American women mathematicians
University of California, San Diego alumni
Pennsylvania State University faculty
Sloan Research Fellows
20th-century American women
21st-century American women |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marek%20Sloboda | Marek Sloboda (born 1 November 1997) is a Slovak professional ice hockey player who currently playing for HK Dukla Trenčín of the Slovak Extraliga.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
1997 births
Living people
Ice hockey people from Bratislava
Slovak ice hockey left wingers
Motor České Budějovice players
HC Slovan Bratislava players
Bratislava Capitals players
HC Nové Zámky players
HC '05 Banská Bystrica players
HC ZUBR Přerov players
HK Dukla Trenčín players
Slovak expatriate ice hockey players in the Czech Republic |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohomology%20of%20a%20stack | In algebraic geometry, the cohomology of a stack is a generalization of étale cohomology. In a sense, it is a theory that is coarser than the Chow group of a stack.
The cohomology of a quotient stack (e.g., classifying stack) can be thought of as an algebraic counterpart of equivariant cohomology. For example, Borel's theorem states that the cohomology ring of a classifying stack is a polynomial ring.
See also
l-adic sheaf
smooth topology
References
Algebraic geometry
Cohomology theories |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamiltonian%20cycle%20polynomial | In mathematics, the Hamiltonian cycle polynomial of an n×n-matrix is a polynomial in its entries, defined as
where is the set of n-permutations having exactly one cycle.
This is an algebraic option useful, in a number of cases, for determining the existence of a Hamiltonian cycle in a directed graph.
It is a generalization of the number of Hamiltonian cycles of a digraph as the sum of the products of its Hamiltonian cycles' arc weights (all of which equal unity) for weighted digraphs with arc weights taken from a given commutative ring. In the meantime, for an undirected weighted graph the sum of the products of the edge weights of its Hamiltonian cycles containing any fixed edge (i,j) can be expressed as the product of the weight of (i,j) and the Hamiltonian cycle polynomial of a matrix received from its weighted adjacency matrix via subjecting its rows and columns to any permutation mapping i to 1 and j to 2 and then removing its 1-st row and 2-nd column.
In () it was shown that
where is the submatrix of induced by the rows and columns of indexed by , and is the complement of in , while the determinant of the empty submatrix is defined to be 1.
Due to this and Borchardt's identities, for a non-singular n×n Cauchy matrix where are diagonal matrices that make unitary (in a real field or a field of a finite characteristic, or orthogonal in the field of complex numbers), is the Hadamard (entry-wise) square of , and is the identity n×n-matrix with the entry of indexes 1,1 replaced by 0.
In a field of characteristic 2 the equality turns into what therefore provides an opportunity to polynomial-time calculate the Hamiltonian cycle polynomial of any unitary matrix (i.e. such that where is the identity n×n-matrix), because in such a field each minor of a unitary matrix coincides with its algebraic complement: where is the identity n×n-matrix with the entry of indexes 1,1 replaced by 0. Hence if it's possible to polynomial-time assign weights from a field of characteristic 2 to a digraph's arcs that make its weighted adjacency matrix unitary and having a non-zero Hamiltonian cycle polynomial then the digraph is Hamiltonian. Therefore the Hamiltonian cycle problem is computable on such graphs in polynomial time.
In characteristic 2, the Hamiltonian cycle polynomial of an n×n-matrix is zero if n > 2k where k is its rank or if it's involutory and n > 2.
Besides, in an arbitrary ring whose characteristic isn't an even natural number, for any skew-symmetric n×n-matrix there exists a power series in a formal variable such that it's a unitary n×n-matrix over and , , while for any satisfying these conditions equals the coefficient at the -th power of in the power series . And for any ring of an even characteristic the same is true when the diagonal of is a multiple of 2. It implies that computing, up to the -th power of , the Hamiltonian cycle polynomial of a unitary n×n-matrix over the infinite exten |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin%20Bellu%C5%A1 | Martin Belluš (born 2 December 1991) is a Slovak professional ice hockey player who is currently playing for Vlci Žilina of the Slovak 1. Liga.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
Awards and honors
References
External links
1991 births
Living people
HK Poprad players
HC '05 Banská Bystrica players
HC Košice players
HC 07 Detva players
ŠHK 37 Piešťany players
HK Spišská Nová Ves players
Indy Fuel players
Yertis Pavlodar players
KH Sanok players
Slovak ice hockey right wingers
Sportspeople from Spišská Nová Ves
Ice hockey people from the Košice Region
HC Slovan Bratislava players
HK Dukla Trenčín players
MsHK Žilina players
Slovak expatriate ice hockey players in the Czech Republic
Expatriate ice hockey players in Kazakhstan
Expatriate ice hockey players in Poland
Slovak expatriate sportspeople in Poland
Slovak expatriate ice hockey players in the United States
Slovak expatriate sportspeople in Kazakhstan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joona%20J%C3%A4%C3%A4skel%C3%A4inen | Joona Jääskeläinen (born 5 September 1996) is a Finnish professional ice hockey player who currently plays professionally for HC Košice of the Slovak Extraliga.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
Awards and honors
References
External links
1996 births
Living people
People from Imatra
Finnish ice hockey right wingers
Finnish expatriate ice hockey players in the Czech Republic
Finnish expatriate ice hockey players in Slovakia
Kokkolan Hermes players
SaiPa players
Imatran Ketterä players
Mikkelin Jukurit players
HC '05 Banská Bystrica players
BK Mladá Boleslav players
HC Slovan Bratislava players
HC Košice players
Ice hockey people from South Karelia |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michal%20Kab%C3%A1%C4%8D | Michal Kabáč (born 1 December 1995) is a Slovak professional ice hockey player who currently playing for HK Dukla Michalovce of the Slovak Extraliga.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
1995 births
Living people
HC '05 Banská Bystrica players
MHk 32 Liptovský Mikuláš players
MHC Martin players
Madison Capitols players
HK Dukla Michalovce players
Slovak ice hockey centres
People from Trstená
Ice hockey people from the Žilina Region
Slovak expatriate ice hockey players in the United States |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joy%20Morris | Joy Morris (born 1970) is a Canadian mathematician whose research involves group theory, graph theory, and the connections between the two through Cayley graphs. She is also interested in mathematics education, is the author of two open-access undergraduate mathematics textbooks, and oversees a program in which university mathematics education students provide a drop-in mathematics tutoring service for parents of middle school students. She is a professor of mathematics at the University of Lethbridge.
Education and career
Morris is originally from Toronto, Ontario. Both her parents had doctorates; she was the youngest of their four children, another of whom also earned a Ph.D.. She was educated through various alternative-education and gifted-student programs in the Toronto public school system. She graduated from Trent University in 1992 with a double major in mathematics and English, and with fourth-year honours in mathematics earned in part through a summer research project with Brian Alspach at Simon Fraser University.
She entered graduate study directly after graduating, continuing to work with Alspach at Simon Fraser, and completed her doctorate in 2000 with a dissertation on Isomorphisms of Cayley Graphs. Morris joined the Lethbridge faculty in 2000, and was promoted to full professor in 2015. her position as a professor at Lethbridge was for half-time.
Mathematics education
In 2017, after learning about the frustrating experiences of her middle-school daughter's friends' parents, Morris founded a drop-in mathematics tutoring center through the University of Lethbridge, in which Lethbridge mathematics education students would tutor middle-school parents on the mathematics their children were learning, and provide educational activities for the parents to do with their children. The program was successful, and has continued in subsequent years.
Other contributions
Morris's results in groups, graphs, and the symmetries of groups and graphs include a proof of Toida's conjecture according to which, for certain circulant graphs (the Cayley graphs of finite cyclic groups), every symmetry of the graph comes from a symmetry of the underlying group. According to Toida's conjecture, this equivalence between group and graph symmetries should be valid when all of the members of the generating set of the group used to construct the graph are individually generators of the group.
Morris has written two open textbooks in mathematics for the undergraduate students at Lethbridge. They are:
Proofs and Concepts: the fundamentals of abstract mathematics (with Dave Witte Morris, 2013)
Combinatorics: an upper-level introductory course in enumeration, graph theory, and design theory (2017)
References
External links
Home page
1970 births
Living people
Canadian mathematicians
Women mathematicians
Graph theorists
Group theorists
Academic staff of the University of Lethbridge |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nebiyou%20Perry | Nebiyou Sundance Perry (born October 2, 1999) is an American-born Swedish professional soccer player who plays as a winger for Major League Soccer club Nashville SC.
Career statistics
References
1999 births
Living people
American men's soccer players
United States men's youth international soccer players
Swedish men's footballers
Sweden men's youth international footballers
American expatriate men's soccer players
Swedish expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
AIK Fotboll players
1. FC Köln II players
1. FC Köln players
Trelleborgs FF players
Östersunds FK players
Nashville SC players
Regionalliga players
Superettan players
Allsvenskan players
American expatriate soccer players in Germany
Swedish expatriate sportspeople in Germany
Soccer players from New York City
MLS Next Pro players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rich%C3%A1rd%20Zsolnai | Richárd Zsolnai (born 28 March 1995) is a Hungarian professional footballer who plays for Ajka.
Career
On 23 June 2022, Zsolnai returned to Ajka on a three-year contract.
Club statistics
Updated to games played as of 5 August 2020.
References
External links
1995 births
Footballers from Budapest
Living people
Hungarian men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Vác FC players
Diósgyőri VTK players
Budafoki MTE footballers
FC Ajka players
Nemzeti Bajnokság I players
Nemzeti Bajnokság II players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean%20Bellissard | Jean Vincent Bellissard (born 1 March 1946, Lyon) is a French theoretical physicist and mathematical physicist, known for his work on C*-algebras, K-theory, noncommutative geometry as applied to solid state physics, particularly, to quantum Hall effect.
Bellissard worked as a teaching assistant at the École catholique des arts et métiers (E.C.A.M.) from 1965 to 1969. He graduated from the Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 with bachelor's degree in 1967, Diplôme d'études approfondies (DEA) in wave mechanics in 1968, and DEA in theoretical physics in 1970. He qualified in 1969 with the Agrégation in physics. From 1969 to 1970 he taught at Lyon's Lycée La Martinière, an engineering preparatory school, and was simultaneously enrolled as a graduate student in theoretical physics at the Aix-Marseille University. In 1974 he received his doctorate from the Aix-Marseille University with thesis Champs quantifiés dans un champ exterieur (Quantized fields in an external field) with advisor Raymond Stora. Bellissard was a postdoc from 1974 to 1974 at the University of Lausanne with advisor Jean-Jacques Loeffel. At the Université de Provence Aix-Marseille I, Bellissard was from 1970 to 1980 an assistant professor, from 1980 to 1991 an associate professor. From 1991 he was to 2007 a full professor in Toulouse.
On a visit from October 1979 to January 1980 at the Institut des hautes études scientifiques (I.H.É.S.) he worked with Alain Connes and started on a program of research on the noncommutative geometry of aperiodic solids. Bellissard created the Group of Theoretical Physics at the Paul Sabatier University in Toulouse. During the 1980s he visited the United States several times. From 1983 to 1984 he was a visiting professor at Princeton University. In 1986 he was visiting researcher at Caltech. From 1993 to 1999 he was the editor-in-chief of the Annales de l'Institut Henri Poincaré (theoretical physics). In 2002 he moved to Atlanta, Georgia to become a full professor at Georgia Tech, where he has a joint appointment in the School of Mathematics and the School of Physics.
In 1989 he received the Prix Paul-Langevin from the Société Française de Physique. In 1994 he was an Invited Speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Zürich with talk Noncommmutative geometry and the quantum Hall effect. In 1996 he was made Chevalier Ordre des Palmes Académique (France). He was elected a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society in 2012.
Selected publications
K-theory of C*-algebras in solid state physics, Lect. Notes Phys. 257, 99–156 (1986).
Gap labeling theorems for Schrödinger Operators, in Michel Waldschmidt, Claude Itzykson, Jean-Marc Luck, Pierre Moussa (eds.): From Number Theory and Physics, pp. 538–630, Les Houches 1989, Springer 1992
References
External links
1946 births
Living people
Theoretical physicists
Mathematical physicists
20th-century French physicists
21st-century French physicists
Scientists from Lyon
Aix-Marseille Univers |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enea%20Bortolotti | Enea Bortolotti (28 September 1896 – 22 June 1942) was an Italian mathematician born in Rome.
Biography
He graduated in mathematics in 1920 at the Universities of Pisa, where he was a student of Luigi Bianchi. He taught analytic and descriptive geometry at the Universities of Cagliari and Florence. He was mainly involved in differential geometry: it was a specialist in the theory of linear connections.
Notes
External links
An Italian short biography of Enea Bortolotti in MATEpristem online.
1896 births
1942 deaths
Differential geometers
20th-century Italian mathematicians
University of Pisa alumni |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Localized%20Chern%20class | In algebraic geometry, a localized Chern class is a variant of a Chern class, that is defined for a chain complex of vector bundles as opposed to a single vector bundle. It was originally introduced in Fulton's intersection theory, as an algebraic counterpart of the similar construction in algebraic topology. The notion is used in particular in the Riemann–Roch-type theorem.
S. Bloch later generalized the notion in the context of arithmetic schemes (schemes over a Dedekind domain) for the purpose of giving #Bloch's conductor formula that computes the non-constancy of Euler characteristic of a degenerating family of algebraic varieties (in the mixed characteristic case).
Definitions
Let Y be a pure-dimensional regular scheme of finite type over a field or discrete valuation ring and X a closed subscheme. Let denote a complex of vector bundles on Y
that is exact on . The localized Chern class of this complex is a class in the bivariant Chow group of defined as follows. Let denote the tautological bundle of the Grassmann bundle of rank sub-bundles of . Let . Then the i-th localized Chern class is defined by the formula:
where is the projection and is a cycle obtained from by the so-called graph construction.
Example: localized Euler class
Let be as in #Definitions. If S is smooth over a field, then the localized Chern class coincides with the class
where, roughly, is the section determined by the differential of f and (thus) is the class of the singular locus of f.
Consider an infinite dimensional bundle E over an infinite dimensional manifold M with a section s with Fredholm derivative. In practice this situation occurs whenever we have system of PDE’s which are elliptic when considered modulo some gauge group action. The zero set Z(s) is then the moduli space of solutions modulo gauge, and the index of the derivative is the virtual dimension. The localized Euler class of the pair (E,s) is a homology class with closed support on the zero set of the section. Its dimension is the index of the derivative. When the section is transversal, the class is just the fundamental class of the zero set with the proper orientation. The class is well behaved in one parameter families and therefore defines the “right” fundamental cycle even if the section is no longer transversal.
Bloch's conductor formula
This formula enables us to compute the conductor that measures the wild ramification by using the sheaf of differential 1-forms. S. Bloch conjectures a formula for the Artin conductor of the ℓ-adic etale cohomology of a regular model of a variety over a local field and proves it for a curve. The deepest result about the Bloch conductor is its equality with the Artin conductor, defined in terms of the l-adic cohomology of X, in certain cases.
References
S. Bloch, “Cycles on arithmetic schemes and Euler characteristics of curves,” Algebraic geometry, Bowdoin, 1985, 421–450, Proc. Symp. Pure Math. 46, Part 2, Amer. Math. Soc., Providence |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sommer%20Gentry | Sommer Elizabeth Gentry is an American mathematician who works as a professor of mathematics at the United States Naval Academy and as a research associate in surgery at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. Her research concerns operations research and its applications to the optimization of organ transplants, and has led to the discovery of geographic inequities in organ allocation. She is also interested in dancing, teaches swing dancing at the Naval Academy, and wrote her doctoral dissertation on the mathematics and robotics of dance.
Early life and education
Gentry is originally from California. As a girl, she was inspired to continue in mathematics by the recreational mathematics columns of Martin Gardner and Ivars Peterson. In 1993, as a senior at Thousand Oaks High School, Gentry had the highest individual score at the Ventura County, California county-level Academic Decathlon.
She graduated from Stanford University in 1998, with both a bachelor's degree in mathematical and computational sciences and a master's degree in engineering-economic systems and operations research.
She completed her Ph.D. in electrical engineering and computer science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2005. Her dissertation, Dancing cheek to cheek: haptic communication between partner dancers and swing as a finite state machine, was supervised by Eric Feron. In her doctoral research, she modeled the language and notation of dance mathematically using finite state machines, programmed a robot to dance, and used her model to improve haptic communications between humans and robots, with the goal of eventually producing human-machine surgical collaborations that could be more effective than human or robotic surgeons working alone.
Other activities
Gentry is married to Israeli surgeon Dorry Segev. She met him at a Lindy Hop dance competition in 1999, and a few years later they won the British Championship in Lindy Hop. She has also worked with Segev on the Kidney Paired Donation program.
In 2017, Gentry was a competitor on the Fox Television game show Superhuman.
She has also been a vocal critic of the airport passenger screening procedures of the US Transportation Security Administration, which she characterizes as sexual assault.
Recognition
Gentry won the Henry L. Alder Award for Distinguished Teaching by a Beginning Faculty Member of the Mathematical Association of America in 2009. She won the Navy Meritorious Civilian Service Award in 2014, and in the same year was a finalist for the INFORMS Daniel H. Wagner Prize for Excellence in Operations Research Practice. She will deliver a Mathematical Association of America (MAA) invited lecture at MathFest 2021.
References
External links
Sommer and Dorry (shared personal page)
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
21st-century American mathematicians
American women mathematicians
Operations researchers
Stanford University alumni
MIT School of Engineering alumni
United States Naval Aca |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asuman%20Aksoy | Asuman Güven Aksoy is a Turkish-American mathematician whose research concerns topics in functional analysis, metric geometry, and operator theory including Banach spaces, measures of non-compactness, fixed points, Birnbaum–Orlicz spaces, real trees, injective metric spaces, and tight spans. She works at Claremont McKenna College, where she is Crown Professor of Mathematics and George R. Roberts Fellow.
Education
Aksoy studied mathematics and physics at Ankara University, graduating with a bachelor's degree in 1976. She earned a master's degree in mathematics at Middle East Technical University in 1978, with a thesis Subspaces of Nuclear Fréchet Spaces supervised by Tosun Terzioğlu.
She moved to the United States in 1978 for additional graduate study at the University of Michigan, and eventually became a US citizen. She completed her doctorate at the University of Michigan in 1984. Her dissertation, Approximation Schemes, Related -Numbers, and Applications, was supervised by Melapalayam S. Ramanujan.
Career
After completing her doctorate, Aksoy joined the faculty of Oakland University in 1984, and was tenured there in 1987. She moved to Claremont McKenna in 1990, and chaired the mathematics department there from 1997 to 2000 and again from 2007 to 2009. She was given the Crown Professorship and Roberts Fellowship in 2009.
Books
With Mohamed Amine Khamsi, Aksoy is the author of two books:
Nonstandard Methods in Fixed Point Theory (Universitext, Springer, 1990)
A Problem Book in Real Analysis (Springer, 2009)
Recognition
In 2006 the Southern California–Nevada Section of the Mathematical Association of America gave Aksoy their annual Award for Distinguished College or University Teaching of Mathematics.
References
External links
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
20th-century American mathematicians
21st-century American mathematicians
American people of Turkish descent
American women mathematicians
Turkish mathematicians
Functional analysts
Ankara University alumni
Middle East Technical University alumni
Oakland University faculty
Claremont McKenna College faculty
University of Michigan alumni
20th-century American women
21st-century American women |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karlie%20Noon | Karlie Alinta Noon is the first Indigenous woman in Australia to graduate with a double degree in maths and physics, an astronomer, of the Gamilaraay people, multiple award winner, 2019 Eureka Prize nominee, and one of the 2017 BBC's 100 Women. She is researching astronomy and astrophysics at the Australian National University, Australia.
Early life
Noon was raised in Coledale, a suburb of Tamworth, the country music centre of Australia, with a significant disparity between people of different economic classes. She describes herself as being "a poor, Aboriginal kid; this definitely influenced my experience of the education system and just not being seen in it." She describes her "terrible attendance rate" at high school, and succeeding in science due to tutoring and the help of a mentor. Support and encouragement from her close family, and in particular her grandmother, allowed her to have the confidence to seek a career in science.
Education and career
Noon found traditional schooling and education in high school to be not suited to her, and received much of her early maths training from a mentor who came to her house. She then obtained her double degree from the University of Newcastle and then moved to studying at ANU, Canberra. Noon then worked for CSIRO’s Indigenous STEM program. Her research has involved understanding the sophisticated astronomic knowledge deeply embedded within Indigenous culture as well as sifting through European and Indigenous accounts of moon haloes.
Awards, honours and recognition
2023 — Astronomy: Sky Country winner, Victorian Premier's Literary Awards People's Choice Award and shortlisted, Victorian Premier's Literary Award for Indigenous Writing
2022 — Astronomy: Sky Country shortlisted for the 2022 nonfiction Age Book of the Year.
2019 — She was a finalist at the Eureka awards for 3M ‘Emerging Leader in Science’.
2019 — Noon made the honour roll for Australian of the Year.
2018 — contributor to the "Made Beautiful by Nature" series of stories.
2017 — voted one of BBC's 100 Women.
2017 — STEM Professional Early Career Award finalist.
2017 — Women of the Future Finalist.
Media and science communications
Noon has a history of science communication, hoping to open the door to STEM for people from minorities. She was reported in the Northern Daily Leader as saying "I want to push the idea that anybody can achieve a career in STEM, everyone has the right to equal opportunities, including young women, including young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people". Noon has worked with the CSIRO to find candidates for the Indigenous STEM awards. Noon has worked to inspire other young children to engage in STEM, including Indigenous people and people from lower socioeconomic groups. She has also advocated that women and girls are capable in science and encourages diversity in STEM. "Girls can absolutely do it and they can smash it just as well as any other person can." Noon's work has involved encouraging In |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan%20Sterne | Jonathan A.C. Sterne is a British statistician, NIHR Senior Investigator, Professor of Medical Statistics and Epidemiology, and the former Head of School of Social and Community Medicine at the University of Bristol. He is co-author of “Essential Medical Statistics”, which received Highly Commended honors in the 2004 BMA Medical Book Competition.
Work
Sterne has been identified by Clarivate Analytics as the a "Highly Cited Researcher" in each of the last three years, as demonstrated by his production of multiple highly cited papers that rank in the top 1% by citations for field and year in Web of Science. He has a longstanding interest in methodology for systematic reviews and meta-analyses, the clinical epidemiology of HIV and AIDS in the era of antiretroviral therapy, causal inference, methodology for epidemiology and health services research, and epidemiology of asthma and allergic diseases. He has been leading the development of the ROBINS-I tool for assessing risk of bias in non-randomized studies of interventions and the development of the Cochrane Risk of Bias (RoB) tool for randomized trials. He is also leading a large collaboration of HIV cohort studies that has led to advances in our understanding of prognosis of HIV positive people. In addition, he has written a number of meta-analysis software routines used by students and researchers around the world.
On 28 August 2019 Sterne, along with Julian Higgins and colleagues, published in The British Medical Journal the RoB 2 tool, an updated version of the most widely used tool for assessing risk of bias in randomized trials included in systematic reviews.
Education
Sterne completed his undergraduate studies in mathematics at the University of Oxford. He holds an MSc and PhD in statistics from the University College London.
References
British statisticians
Academics of the University of Bristol
Alumni of the University of Oxford
Alumni of University College London
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
NIHR Senior Investigators |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiu-Yen%20Kao | Chiu-Yen Kao (born 1974) is a Taiwanese-American applied mathematician specializing in shape optimization, image segmentation, and mathematical biology. She is a professor of mathematics at Claremont McKenna College.
Education and career
Kao comes from a traditional family which did not support her in pursuing higher education; however, she was encouraged by her professors in continuing her studies. She graduated in 1997 from National Taiwan University with a bachelor's degree in mathematics and a minor in physics. She earned a master's degree in applied mechanics in 1999 from the same university. In 2004 she completed her Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of California, Los Angeles. Her dissertation, Fast sweeping methods for static Hamilton-Jacobi equations, was supervised by Stanley Osher.
After working as a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for Mathematics and its Applications of the University of Minnesota, she joined the mathematics faculty of the Ohio State University in 2006. She visited Claremont McKenna in 2011–2012 and took a permanent position there in 2012.
Book
With Avner Friedman, Kao is a co-author of the book Mathematical Modeling of Biological Processes (Springer, 2014).
References
External links
Home page
1974 births
Living people
21st-century Taiwanese mathematicians
National Taiwan University alumni
University of California, Los Angeles alumni
Claremont McKenna College faculty
21st-century American women |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohammed%20Al-Majhad | Mohammed Al-Majhad (; born 16 July 1998) is a Saudi Arabian footballer who plays as a midfielder for Saudi Pro League side Al-Ahli and the Saudi Arabia national team.
Career statistics
Club
International
Statistics accurate as of match played 10 August 2019.
References
External links
1998 births
Living people
Saudi Arabian men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Saudi Pro League players
Saudi First Division League players
Al Fateh SC players
Al-Ahli Saudi FC players
Saudi Arabia men's youth international footballers
Saudi Arabia men's international footballers
Sportspeople from Al-Hasa
Saudi Arabian Shia Muslims |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statscore | STATSCORE is a Polish sports data company with headquarters in Katowice, Poland. STATSCORE provides sports statistics, data and live match information to sports organizations, leagues, media outlets, broadcasters and betting operators.
The company was founded as softnetSPORT in January 2006 in Katowice by Tomasz Myalski. STATSCORE's products include sports widgets, live trackers, sports data visualizations, minisites, and data feeds.
STATSCORE's data currently covers 29 sports and over 10,000 sports competitions from all over the world, including soccer, American football, basketball, baseball, volleyball, rugby, ice hockey, tennis, futsal and ski jumping. The company also provides data for e-sports, such as League of Legends, Counter Strike, Dota 2. STATSCORE employs teams of professional scouts responsible for collecting live data from sporting events held around the world.
Partners and clients
STATSCORE is a data provider to numerous sports leagues and federations, including Polish Fortuna 1 Liga, Polish Futsal Ekstraklasa, PGNiG Superliga (both men and women competitions), Polska Hokej Liga (Polish Hockey League), and Slovak Slovnaft Handball Extraliga., as well as professional sports clubs, such as Sporting Clube de Portugal. STATSCORE's data has been widely used by sports betting companies, such as EveryMatrix, BtoBet, Altenar, STS, and tipp3. Sports statistics collected by the company have also been employed by media outlets, including Le Figaro and Onet.pl.
In 2020 STATSCORE became the naming rights sponsor of the Polish Futsal Ekstraklasa.
Awards
In 2016, STATSCORE won the Deloitte Rising Stars Award. In 2017 and 2020, the company was shortlisted in two categories at the SBC Awards. In 2018, STATSCORE was recognised as one of the 50 fastest-growing technology companies in Central Europe (Technology Fast 50 CE).
References
Sports databases
Providers of services to on-line companies
Online companies of Poland |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maxwell%27s%20theorem%20%28geometry%29 | Maxwell's theorem is the following statement about triangles in the plane.
The theorem is named after the physicist James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879), who proved it in his work on reciprocal figures, which are of importance in statics.
References
Daniel Pedoe: Geometry: A Comprehensive Course. Dover, 1970, pp. 35–36, 114–115
Daniel Pedoe: "On (what should be) a Well-Known Theorem in Geometry." The American Mathematical Monthly, Vol. 74, No. 7 (August – September, 1967), pp. 839–841 (JSTOR)
Dao Thanh Oai, Cao Mai Doai, Quang Trung, Kien Xuong, Thai Binh: "Generalizations of some famous classical Euclidean geometry theorems." International Journal of Computer Discovered Mathematics, Vol. 1, No. 3, pp. 13–20
External links
Maxwell's Theorem at cut-the-knot.org
Elementary geometry
Theorems about triangles |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maicon%20Santana | Maicon Festa Santana (born 22 February 1989) is a Brazilian footballer who currently plays as a forward for Próspera.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
External links
1989 births
Living people
Brazilian men's footballers
Brazilian expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Campeonato Brasileiro Série C players
Veranópolis Esporte Clube Recreativo e Cultural players
Sport Club Internacional players
Esporte Clube Santo André players
Clube Esportivo Aimoré players
Juventus Atlético Clube players
Sociedade Esportiva e Recreativa Caxias do Sul players
Iraty Sport Club players
Londrina Esporte Clube players
Esporte Clube Passo Fundo players
Cerâmica Atlético Clube players
Futebol Clube Santa Cruz players
Guarany Futebol Clube players
Grêmio Esportivo Bagé players
Grêmio Esportivo Juventus players
Hong Kong Premier League players
Yuen Long FC players
Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Hong Kong
Expatriate men's footballers in Hong Kong
People from Veranópolis |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verdiana%20Masanja | Verdiana Grace Masanja ( Kashaga, born October 12, 1954) is a Tanzanian mathematician specializing in fluid dynamics. She is the first Tanzanian woman to earn a doctorate in mathematics.
Education
Masanja was born in Bukoba, at the time part of the United Nations trust territory of Tanganyika. She was a student at the Jangwani Girls Secondary School in Dar es Salaam and then at the University of Dar es Salaam, completing a degree in mathematics and physics in 1976 and a master's degree in 1981. Her master's thesis was Effect of Injection on Developing Laminar Flow of Reiner–Philippoff Fluids in a Circular Pipe.
She earned a second master's degree in physics and completed her doctorate in fluid dynamics at the Technical University of Berlin. Her dissertation, A Numerical Study of a Reiner–Rivlin Fluid in an Axi-Symmetrical Circular Pipe, was jointly supervised by Wolfgang Muschik and Gerd Brunk.
Career
Already, while a master's student, Masanja had become a lecturer at the University of Dar es Salaam, and on her return from Germany she became a professor there, and remained on the university's faculty until 2010.
In 2006 she began teaching as well at the National University of Rwanda, and in 2007 became a professor there, as well as being appointed as the university's director of research, and as deputy vice chancellor and senior advisor at the University of Kibungo in Rwanda. In 2018 she returned to Tanzania as a professor of applied and computational mathematics at the Nelson Mandela African Institute of Science and Technology in Arusha.
Masanja has served as vice president for Eastern Africa of the African Mathematical Union, chaired the African Mathematical Union Commission on Women in Mathematics in Africa and the Tanzania Education Network, and has served as National Coordinator for Female Education in Mathematics in Africa.
Research
She has also published on the education and participation of women in science.
Masanja is editor-in-chief of the Rwanda Journal.
References
External links
1954 births
Living people
Tanzanian mathematicians
Jangwani Girls Secondary School alumni
University of Dar es Salaam alumni
Technical University of Berlin alumni
Academic staff of the University of Dar es Salaam
Academic staff of the National University of Rwanda
Tanzanian expatriates in Rwanda
Tanzanian expatriates in Germany
20th-century women mathematicians
21st-century mathematicians
21st-century women mathematicians |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laurie%20Heyer | Laurie J. Heyer is an American mathematician specializing in genomics and bioinformatics. She is Kimbrough Professor of Mathematics at Davidson College, director of Davidson's Jay Hurt Hub for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, and former chair of Davidson's Mathematics and Computer Science Department.
Education
Heyer is a graduate of the University of Texas at Arlington. She completed her Ph.D. in 1998 at the University of Colorado Boulder. Her dissertation, The Probabilistic Behavior of Sequence Analysis Scores with Application to Structural Alignment of RNA, was jointly supervised by John A. Williamson and Gary Stormo.
Textbooks
With Malcolm Campbell, Heyer is the author of the textbook Discovering Genomics, Proteomics, & Bioinformatics (Benjamin Cummings and Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 2003; 2nd ed., Pearson, 2007). Campbell, Heyer, and Christopher Paradise also wrote the electronic text Integrating Concepts in Biology.
References
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
21st-century American mathematicians
American women mathematicians
University of Texas at Arlington alumni
University of Colorado Boulder alumni
Davidson College faculty
21st-century American women |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journal%20of%20Modern%20Dynamics | The Journal of Modern Dynamics is a peer-reviewed scientific journal of mathematics published by the American Institute of Mathematical Sciences with the support of the Anatole Katok Center for Dynamical Systems and Geometry (Pennsylvania State University). The editor-in-chief is Giovanni Forni (University of Maryland College Park
History
The journal was established in 2007 with Anatole Katok as the founding editor-in-chief. It covers the theory of dynamical systems with particular emphasis on the mutual interaction between dynamics and other major areas of mathematical research: number theory, symplectic geometry, differential geometry, rigidity, quantum chaos, Teichmüller theory, geometric group theory, and harmonic analysis on manifolds. Until 2015 the journal was published quarterly. Since then, accepted papers are published online first and a single printed volume is published yearly.
Abstracting and indexing
The journal is abstracted and indexed in:
Current Contents/Physical, Chemical & Earth Sciences
EBSCO databases
MathSciNet
Science Citation Index Expanded
Scopus
Zentralblatt MATH
According to MathSciNet, the journal has a 2018 Mathematical Citation Quotient of 0.89.
References
External links
Mathematics journals
Academic journals established in 2007
English-language journals
Continuous journals |
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