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Chen Wen-chen (Chinese: 陳文成; pinyin: Chén Wénchéng, sometimes romanized as Chen Wen-cheng) was a Taiwanese assistant professor of mathematics (specializing in probability and statistics) at Carnegie Mellon University who died on 3 July 1981 (aged 31) under mysterious circumstances. After the conclusion of his third year of teaching, he ...
Jeremy Avigad is a professor of philosophy and a professor of mathematical sciences at Carnegie Mellon University.. He received a B.A. in mathematics from Harvard University in 1989, and a Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of California at Berkeley in 1995 under the supervision of Jack Silver. [1]
Po-Shen Loh (Chinese: 罗博深; born June 18, 1982) is an American mathematician specializing in combinatorics.Loh teaches at Carnegie Mellon University, and from 2014 to 2023 served as the national coach of the United States' International Mathematical Olympiad team.
In 1978, he moved to Harvard University, Cambridge, MA where he was an assistant professor of Computer Science in the Division of Applied Sciences. He left Harvard in 1982 to join the faculty in the Computer Science Department at Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA. He was appointed Full Professor in 1989.
Hugh D. Young (Ph.D. 1959), longtime Professor who taught Physics for over 50 years at Carnegie Mellon. Professor Young was co-author of the later editions of the highly regarded textbook University Physics, now in its 15th edition, and received many of Carnegie Mellon's highest awards.
On there, he delivers mathematics and computer science lectures on topics such as complexity theory, spectral graph theory, and analysis of boolean functions, as well as uploads lectures from his classes at Carnegie Mellon University. He has directed several course series, such as his "CS Theory Toolkit" series, where he explores mathematical ...
In 1946, he became professor of mathematics at Carnegie Mellon University. [1] He wrote a letter of recommendation to Princeton University for John Forbes Nash, Jr. , later a Nobel laureate. In 1949, Duffin and his student Raoul Bott developed a generalized method of synthesising networks without transformers which were required in earlier methods.
Irene Maria Quintanilha Coelho da Fonseca is a Portuguese-American applied mathematician, the Kavčić-Moura University Professor of Mathematics at Carnegie Mellon University, where she directs the Center for Nonlinear Analysis, which is part of the Mellon College of Science's Department of Mathematical Sciences. [1] [2]