Category talk:Fellows of the American Mathematical Society

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Missing fellows

Comments

The following people from the inaugural class of fellows do not seem to have Wikipedia articles yet. If the links turn blue, it may mean either that a new article has been created and should be added to this category, or that someone else has the same name and that the link here should be disambiguated. (One possible exception is Jacques Hurtubise, currently a redirect to a Quebecois magazine; I haven't determined whether the JH who founded it is the same as the mathematician.) As articles on these subjects get filled in, please remove them from this list. —David Eppstein (talk) 23:52, 2 September 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Please remove the name after the article on the name was added to Category:Fellows of the American Mathematical Society. -- Taku (talk) 22:44, 23 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Also consider adding at least three references, One the subject's CV, the note

In 2012, s/he became a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society.<ref>[http://www.ams.org/profession/fellows-list List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society]</ref>

and {{MathGenealogy}}. Solomon7968 09:02, 17 December 2014 (UTC)[reply]
Why three? If we just cite the official list at the AMS, and the name and affiliation both match, is there any room for doubt of the correctness of the listing? Or, if you mean, when creating an article it should have three references, I think that is a good rule of thumb. The mathematics genealogy project (and our {{
mathgenealogy}} template) can be helpful for providing one of them. —David Eppstein (talk) 18:59, 17 December 2014 (UTC)[reply
]
Yes, I mean the second. Ideally all articles should have more than 3 references but, hey, 3 is a good starter.
And an observation, this list is up for more than an year and so far only 4 people have edited it. Also there is the (semi-active)
Wikipedia:WikiProject Mathematics/missing mathematicians. Creating biographies of mathematicians don't necessarily need knowledge of maths. I think we should try to reach out to editors interested in biographical articles and may be set a target of completing this list, maybe before 2016. Thoughts? Solomon7968 20:15, 17 December 2014 (UTC)[reply
]
Sure, if you can find projects interested in assisting. Wikipedia:WikiProject Women scientists might be interested in some of these, for instance. —David Eppstein (talk) 20:10, 19 December 2014 (UTC)[reply]
Wikipedia:CatScan can be used to track which of the existing articles do not have the {{MathGenealogy}} template, with the caveat that many articles may have it in a non templated format. Solomon7968 12:50, 3 April 2015 (UTC)[reply
]

I noticed today that {{subst:page name}} doesn't worked for the article Daniel Allcock for some reason. Anybody knows why? Solomon7968 18:04, 17 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Because it should be {{subst:pagename}} without the space? —David Eppstein (talk) 18:20, 17 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Ah, I see it works without the space. However it also seems to, then, put the article into a Hidden category which later requires cleaning up.
Btw, I notice you are adding "Year of birth missing (living people)" categories to quite a few of the articles. I don't see the benefit of it. We are not going to be able to get their birth year (let alone date), unless the academics themselves include in their webpage/CV. Solomon7968 19:28, 17 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I am substing the {{
lifetime}} template, which sets a DEFAULTSORT and adds the year of birth/death and living person categories. It is also the one that adds the missing year category. So if you think this is a useless category, I think the proper place to discuss it is on the talk page for that template. —David Eppstein (talk) 21:37, 17 August 2015 (UTC)[reply
]

Is there any way to track that whether any articles of this category are getting speedily deleted? I noticed today our article on Sucharit Sarkar is deleted (he has got at least an one paper with citation count 167; which some of our AMS folks don't have). I won't be surprised if there is precedent that some article of this category has also been deleted that way. Solomon7968 17:11, 20 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Not easily, no. —David Eppstein (talk) 02:25, 28 September 2015 (UTC)[reply]

I propose that we start a new list from the Category in the model of

List of Fellows of the Association for Computing Machinery which will make it easier to complete article creation on the redlinks (some of the redlinks are obviously also mentioned at List of International Congresses of Mathematicians Plenary and Invited Speakers) with the next 2018 ICM as the target date (earlier target of 2016 was just too ambitious). The category should stay but this talk page better fits at the article talk page. Would you be able to start the article and move (without leaving a redirect) this page? Solomon7968 14:52, 7 November 2016 (UTC)[reply
]

Probably easier just to start a new article from scratch than to try to copy this page and merge it with the existing category. —David Eppstein (talk) 16:53, 7 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I fail to see how it can be easier. We shouldn't have any compulsion to start with the whole list in the first edit. Let me know if you are going to do it. Your refusal will prompt me to start the page with the 2017 class fellows, the rest will follow in subsequent edits. Solomon7968 17:02, 7 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Easier because the lists here are only the missing ones, while the lists on the AMS web site are the entire classes for their years. A little regular-expression transformation should put them into our format without a lot of hand editing required. —David Eppstein (talk) 18:13, 7 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]
On the other hand, one advantage of merging the list here with the content of the category would be that the names are already matched to the Wikipedia articles, avoiding any issues with Wikipedia using a different name than the AMS and with other non-mathematicians using the same names. So if you want to use this talk page as the basis of a list article for that reason, I have no objection. If I were doing it myself I'd do it from the AMS lists again rather than trying to re-merge this talk with the category, but maybe your workflow is different than mine. —David Eppstein (talk) 21:37, 7 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I don't know about regular-expressions. If it is indeed easy then I guess it is better that I not touch it right now. Solomon7968 00:59, 8 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]

2013 fellows

Announced in 2012, but the AMS labels as the 2013 Class of Fellows.[1] Some (many?) Wikipedia articles refer to fellows from the Class of 2012.

Donald W. Anderson, Steve Armentrout, Matthew Baker (mathematician), David Balaban, Eiichi Bannai,

J. Thomas Beale
, Eric Bedford (mathematician), Steven R. Bell, David J. Benson, Manuel Berriozábal, Edward Bertram, Dietmar Bisch, Paul Blanchard (mathematician), Anthony Bloch, Mario Bonk, Lewis Bowen, Kenneth Bromberg, John L. Bryant, Krzysztof Burdzy, Marc Burger, Daniel M. Burns, Jr., Xavier Cabré, James Cantrell (mathematician), Jon F. Carlson,
Alberto S. Cattaneo
, Mu-Fa Chen, Gregory Cherlin, James Cogdell, Joel M. Cohen, Frederick R. Cohen, Harvey Cohn (mathematician), William Wistar Comfort II, Joseph G. Conlon, Peter Constantin, Daryl Cooper, Arthur Herbert Copeland, Jr., Jim Michael Cushing, David Damanik, James N. Damon, Robert Daverman, Donald M. Davis (mathematician), Freddy Delbaen, Vladimir F. Demyanov, R. Keith Dennis, Harold G. Diamond, Harold Donnelly, Jim Douglas, Jr., Bruce K. Driver, Alan H. Durfee, Patrick Eberlein, C. Henry Edwards, Robert D. Edwards, John Etnyre, John H. Ewing (mathematician), Edward Fadell, Jacques Faraut, Burton Fein, Giovanni Felder, Samuel L. P. Ferguson, Michael Field (mathematician), Paul Fife, David Fisher (mathematician), Leopold Flatto, Paul Fong (mathematician), Robert Fossum, John M. Franks, David Fried (mathematician), Masatoshi Fukushima, Damien Gaboriau, Wilfrid Dossou Gangbo, Ramesh Gangolli, Yoshikazu Giga, Robert Gilmer, Robert Glassey, Kenneth Goodearl, Luis Gorostiza, Edward L. Green, Changfeng Gui, Richard F. Gundy, James Haglund, Richard M. Hain, Jonathan I. Hall, Vagn Lundsgaard Hansen, Raymond C. Heitmann, Simon Hellerstein, J. William Helton, John Hempel, Johnny L. Henderson, Ira W. Herbst, Onesimo Hernandez-Lerma, Paul D. Hill, Peter G. Hinman, Karl Heinrich Hofmann, Ko Honda, Steven Hurder, Bill Jacob, Shi Jin (mathematician), Mattias Jonsson, IIya Kapovich, Michael K.-H. Kiessling, Yuri I. Kifer, Christopher King (mathematician), Guido Kings, James Kister, Robert J. Koch, Antoni A. Kosinski, Peter Kuchment, Aderemi Kuku, Joseph D. Lakey, Michel L. Lapidus, Rafal Latala, Reinhard Christian Laubenbacher, Bernard Leclerc (mathematician), Nicolas Lerner, Naichung Conan Leung, Harold L. Levine, William James Lewis (mathematician), Peter W.-K. Li, Yanyan Li (mathematician), Huaxin Lin, James P. Lin, Wen-Hsiung Lin, Douglas Lind, Yiming Long, Zhiqin Lu, Doron Lubinsky, Bradley Lucier, Mauro Maggioni, Leonid Makar-Limanov, John Mallet-Paret, David Manderscheid, David Marker, Rafe Mazzeo, Donald E. McClure, James E. McClure, David W. McLaughlin, George F. McNulty, Kenneth R. Meyer, Alexei Miasnikov, Dragan Milicic, Ezra Miller (mathematician), Charles F. Miller III, Stephen A. Mitchell (mathematician), Richard Montgomery (mathematician), Itay Neeman, Dmitri Nikshych, Takaaki Nishida, Mogens Niss, Ricardo Nochetto, Masatoshi Noumi, Serge Ochanine, Yong-Geun Oh, Robert Oliver (mathematician), Howard Osborn, J. Marshall Osborn, Jongil Park, Thomas H. Parker, Brian J. Parshall, Kevin R. Payne, Robin Pemantle, Benedetto Piccoli, Anand Pillay, Loren D. Pitt, John C. Polking, Robert Powers, Stewart B. Priddy, Aleksandr Pukhlikov, Ian F. Putnam, David E. Radford, Arun Ram, Dinakar Ramakrishnan, Samuel M. Rankin III, Frank Raymond (mathematician),
Alan William Reid
, Victor Reiner, Michael Renardy, Stefan Richter (mathematician), Joel Robbin, Paul C. Roberts, Clark Robinson, Richard Rochberg, Rodolfo Rodriguez (mathematician), David Rohrlich, Rodolfo Ruben Rosales, Haskell Rosenthal, Alexey N. Rudakov, Mikhail Safonov (mathematician), David J. Saltman, Fadil Santosa, Leslie Saper, Murray Schacher, Reinhard E. Schultz, Lorenz J. Schwachhoefer, L. Ridgway Scott, Leonard L. Scott, Zbigniew Semadeni, Michael Shearer, Toshitada Shintani, Dimitri Shlyakhtenko, Alan Siegel (mathematician), Lance W. Small, John Smillie (mathematician), David A. Smith (mathematician), Stephen D. Smith (mathematician), Louis Solomon, Boris Solomyak, Frank Sottile, Olof Staffans, J. T. Stafford, Dennis Stanton, Michael R. Stein, Peter Sternberg,
Charles J. Stone
, Seth Sullivant, Hector J. Sussmann, B. A. Taylor, Simon Thomas (mathematician), Vidar Thomee, Philippe Tondeur, Jeremy T. Tyson, Bernd Ulrich, Harald Upmeier, Alejandro Uribe, Jeffrey D. Vaaler, Alphonse T. Vasquez, Alberto Verjovsky, Stephen Wainger, John J. Walsh (mathematician), Lewis E. Ward, Rudi Weikard, James E. West (mathematician), Brett D. Wick, Roger Wiegand, Clarence W. Wilkerson, Jr., Jeb F. Willenbring, Robert F. Williams (mathematician), Robert Lee Wilson (mathematician), Michael Wolf (mathematician), David J. Wright, Jared Wunsch, Jack Xin, Deane Yang, Yisong Yang, Jing Yu, Jiu-Kang Yu, Yuan Yaxiang, Gaoyong Zhang, James J. Zhang, Peter Zhevandrov

2014 fellows

And here are the missing ones from the class of 2014 (announced November 2013):

Donald Babbitt, Hari Bercovici, Francesco Calegari, Zhen-Qing Chen, John P. D'Angelo, Edward G. Effros, Steven C. Ferry, Patrick J. Fitzsimmons, Solomon Friedberg, Richard J. Gardner, Xiaojun Huang, Alexander Iosevich, Srikanth B. Iyengar, Darren Long, John C. Meakin, Kailash C. Misra, Louis Halle Rowen, K. Peter Russell, Shouhong Wang, Michael I. Weinstein, Kevin R. Zumbrun

2015 missing fellows

Class of 2015, announced late 2014:

Alfonso Castro, Michael W. Davis, Paul Dupuis (mathematician), James Allen Fill, Allan Greenleaf, Matthew J. Gursky, Aloysius G. Helminck, David R. Larson, Hans Lindblad, Mitchell Luskin, Michael A. Mandell, Jonathan Christopher Mattingly, Willard Miller, Jr., Washington Mio, Konstantin Mischaikow, Paul S. Muhly, Gabriel Navarro, Alexander Olshanskii, Andrei Rapinchuk, Cesar E. Silva, Zhi-Qiang Wang, C. Eugene Wayne, Christopher Thomas Woodward

2016 missing fellows

Class of 2016, announced late 2015:

Shiferaw Berhanu, Alexandru Buium, Steven Dale Cutkosky, Alexander Kleshchev, Joachim Krieger, Tao Li (mathematician), Valery Lunts, Lee Mosher, Robert L. Pego, Thomas Schlumprecht, Thomas C. Sideris, Avraham Soffer, Domingo Toledo,

2017 missing fellows

Class of 2017, announced late 2016:[2]

Guillaume Bal, John T. Baldwin, Aaron Bertram (mathematician), Jim Bryan (mathematician), Sagun Chanillo, Scott T. Chapman, Jungkai Alfred Chen, Mihai Ciucu, Yalchin Efendiev, Mark Feighn, Yan Guo, Piotr Hajlasz, Marius Junge, Dmitry Kleinbock, Alex Kontorovich, Daniel Krashen, Henning Krause, Joseph M. Landsberg, Congming Li, Jian-Guo Liu, Umberto Mosco, Allen Moy, Tony Pantev, Xiaochun Rong, Daniel Ruberman, David Savitt (mathematician), Nimish A. Shah, Jie Shen, Ivan Shestakov (mathematician), Jason Starr (mathematician),

Tao Tang
, Dylan Paul Thurston, Ben Weinkove, Alexhandru Zaharescu

2018 missing fellows

Class of 2018, announced late 2017:[3]

Mohammed Abouzaid, Daniel D. Anderson, Lev Borisov (mathematician), Steven Bradlow, Izzet Coskun, James Davis (mathematician), Peter Ebenfelt, Jesper Grodal, Cristian E. Gutierrez, Alexandru Ionescu (mathematician), Nicholas J. Kuhn, Igor Kukavica, Max Lieblich, Feng Luo, Stephen D. Miller (mathematician), Aaron Naber, Lei Ni, Peter Poláčik, Larry L. Schumaker, Timo Seppäläinen, Roger R. Smith, Ed Swartz, Joseph M. Teran, Weiqiang Wang, Richard M. Weiss, Milen Yakimov

2019 missing fellows

Class of 2019, announced late 2018:[4]

Saugata Basu, Martin Bridgeman, Hector D. Ceniceros, Tommaso de Fernex, Richard S. Falk, Daniel Groves, Sergei V. Ivanov (mathematician), Stephen C. Jackson, Matthew Kahle, Camil Muscalu, Alex Poltoratski, J. Maurice Rojas, Min Ru, Stefan Schwede, Aravind Srinivasan, Valerio Toledano Laredo, Valentino Tosatti, Peter E. Trapa, Eric Vigoda, Zhenghan Wang, Tonghai Yang, Chongchun Zeng

2020 missing fellows

Class of 2020, announced late 2019:[5]

Pramod N. Achar, Mark Adler (mathematician), Anar Akhmedov, Michael Bennett (mathematician), Paul Bourgade, Ken Brown (mathematician), Anthony Carbery, Thomas Chen, Ovidiu Costin, Ken Dykema, Steve Gonek, Aaron D. Lauda, Terry Loring, Dhruv Mubayi, Thomas Nevins, Matt Papanikolas, Peter Petersen (mathematician), Christian Rosendal, Jean-Claude Saut, Jeffrey Hudson Schenker, Romyar Sharifi, Steve Shkoller, Mark E. Walker (mathematician), Sai-Kee Yeung

2021 missing fellows

Class of 2021, announced late 2020:[6]

Gang Bao, Jason P. Bell, Jon Brundan, René Carmona, Raymond Hon Fu Chan, John Greenlees, Jean-Luc Guermond, Boris Hasselblatt, Michael A. Hill, Lionel Levine, Hanfeng Li, Kening Lu, Robert Meyerhoff, Juan Meza, Rick Miranda, Marius Mitrea, Volodymyr Nekrashevych, Siddhartha Sahi, Karl Schwede, Mikhail Shapiro, Yannick Sire, ‪Anthony Várilly-Alvarado, Jeff Viaclovsky, Tong Yang, Laurent Younes

2022 missing fellows

Class of 2022, announced late 2021:[7]

Habib Ammari, Matthew Ando, Benjamin Antieau, Andrew J. Blumberg, Harm Derksen [de], László Erdős [de], Robert Fefferman, David Gamarnik, Luis David Garcia-Puente, Samuel Grushevsky, Brian Harbourne, Jonathan D. Hauenstein, Sándor Kovács, Tyler Lawson, Peter Markowich [de], Gaston Mandata N'Guérékata [fr], Amos Nevo, Roman Shvydkoy, Jun Zou

2023 missing fellows

Class of 2023, announced late 2021:[8]

Mark Behrens [d], Kai Cieliebak [de], Guihua Gong [d], Weimin Han [d], Ryan Hynd [d], Robert L. Jerrard [d], Slava Krushkal [d], Christopher Leininger [d], Jianfeng Lu [d], Jiawang Nie [d], Sam Payne, Yiannis Sakellaridis [d], Anurag K. Singh [d], Xiang Tang [d], Vlad Vicol [de], Zhouli Xu

  1. ^ 2013 Class of the Fellows of the AMS, American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2020-11-03.
  2. ^ 2017 Class of the Fellows of the AMS, American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2016-11-06.
  3. ^ 2018 Class of the Fellows of the AMS, American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2017-11-03
  4. ^ 2019 Class of the Fellows of the AMS, American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2018-11-07
  5. ^ 2020 Class of the Fellows of the AMS, American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2019-11-03
  6. ^ 2021 Class of the Fellows of the AMS, American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2020-11-02
  7. ^ 2022 Class of Fellows of the AMS, American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2021-11-05
  8. ^ 2023 Class of Fellows, American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2022-11-09