Adam Marcus (mathematician)

Adam W. Marcus
Born 1979 (age 3536)
United States
Nationality United States
Fields Mathematics
Institutions Princeton University[1]
Alma mater Georgia Institute of Technology
Doctoral advisor Prasad Tetali[2]
Notable awards

Adam Wade Marcus (born August 1979) is an American mathematician. He is an assistant professor in the mathematics department and applied mathematics program at Princeton University. As part of a team of three, Marcus won the Pólya Prize in 2014.

History

Marcus grew up in Marietta, Georgia and was a boarding student at the Darlington School in Rome, Georgia. He attended the Washington University in St. Louis for his undergraduate degree and then completed his doctoral studies under the supervision of Prasad Tetali at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Following his graduation in 2008, he spent four years as a Gibbs Assistant Professor in Applied Mathematics at Yale University. In 2012, Marcus cofounded Crisply, an analytics company in Boston, Massachusetts, where he served as chief scientist until 2015. He is an alumnus of the Hampshire College Summer Studies in Mathematics.[5]

Awards

During 2003–2004, Marcus was a Fulbright scholar in Hungary.[6] In 2008, he was awarded the inaugural Dénes König Prize in Discrete Mathematics from the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics for his work in solving the Stanley–Wilf conjecture.[7] A team consisting of Marcus, Daniel Spielman, and Nikhil Srivastava was awarded the 2014 Pólya Prize for their resolution of the Kadison-Singer problem.[8] He was an invited speaker at the 2014 International Congress of Mathematicians in Seoul, South Korea.[9]

Publications

References

External links

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