Primes Logo PRIMES: Advisory Board

Photo of Noah Arbesfeld

Noah Arbesfeld is a research associate in mathematics at Imperial College London. He received his PhD at Columbia University in 2018 under Andrei Okounkov. As a high school student, he was awarded the 6th place and a scholarship in the 2009 Intel Science Talent Search finals for a project in abstract algebra, which he had carried out at the Research Science Institute (RSI) under the supervision of Pavel Etingof and David Jordan.

Photo of Martina Balagovic

Martina Balagovic , formerly a graduate student at MIT and an RSI mentor, is a lecturer at Newcastle University, UK. While at MIT, she mentored two high school students, Arjun Puranik and Anirudha Balasubramanian, who became, respectively, a finalist and a semifinalist at national science competitions.

Photo of Mira Bernstein

Mira Bernstein is Executive Director of Canada/USA Mathcamp , a binational summer program for mathematically talented high-school students. She received her PhD in mathematics from Harvard University in 1999, did her postdoctoral work at University of California Berkeley, taught mathematics at Wellesley College, and currently holds a research faculty position in the interdisciplinary program in Science, Technology, and Society at Tufts University. She is a founding member of the Metric Geometry and Gerrymandering Group.

Photo of Tatyana Finkelstein

Tatyana Finkelstein is an award-winning mathematics teacher who has taught for over a decade in the Lexington Public School system after teaching mathematics for a decade in St. Petersburg, Russia. She is a 2006 recipient of the Distinguished High School Mathematics Teaching Edyth May Sliffe Award . Mrs. Finkelstein has also been a counselor in the PROMYS for Teachers program at Boston University .

Photo of David Jerison

David Jerison is Professor of Mathematics in the Mathematics Department at MIT. He is currently Chair of the Pure Mathematics Committee and directs SPUR , the mathematics department's summer undergraduate research program as well as the mathematics component of the Research Science Institute (RSI) . Professor Jerison's research is focused on partial differential equations and Fourier analysis. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Photo of Michael Sipser

Michael Sipser is the Donner Professor of Mathematics and served as the Dean of Science at MIT (2013-2020) and the head of the MIT Department of Mathematics (2004-2014). He is a theoretical computer scientist and a member of CSAIL . Professor Sipser's research areas are in algorithms and complexity theory, specifically efficient error correcting codes, interactive proof systems, randomness, quantum computation, and establishing the inherent computational difficulty of problems. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Photo of Gigliola Staffilani

Gigliola Staffilani is the Abby Rockefeller Mauzé Professor of Mathematics and the Faculty Diversity Officer since 2015. Professor Staffilani is an analyst, with a concentration on dispersive nonlinear partial differential equations. She is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Photo of Richard Stanley

Richard Stanley is Professor Emeritus in the Mathematics Department at MIT. He led the combinatorics section of the Clay Research Academy for high school students nad ran a problem-solving seminar that prepared MIT students for the William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition . Professor Stanley's research concerns problems in algebraic combinatorics. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a Member of the National Academy of Sciences.

Photo of Arkady Vaintrob

Arkady Vaintrob is Associate Professor in the Department of Mathematics at the University of Oregon. Before coming to the U.S., for many years he taught mathematics classes for exceptionally talented students at the famous Moscow School 57. He mentored two top winners in national U.S. science competitions, Dmitry Vaintrob and Eric Larson. His research interests are algebra, algebraic geometry, and topology.

walton

Chelsea Walton is a an Associate Professor in the Mathematics Department at Rice University. Her research interests are in various aspects of Noncommutative Algebra, including quantum symmetries, algebras with origins in physics, noncommutative algebraic geometry, noncommutative invariant theory, deformation theory, representation theory, and homological methods. She has served as instructor and speaker in several programs aimed at increasing diversity in mathematics, including the 2012 USTARS conference, the 2013 Connections for Women workshop at MSRI, and the 2013 ADVANCE PRiME seminar series , the Enhancing Diversity in Graduate Education (EDGE) program, and served PRIMES Circle program coordinator in 2013-2014. She maintain the website and email list for women and non-binary researchers in Noncommutative Algebra and Representation Theory (WINART).

Photo of Arkady Vaintrob

Shawna Young is Executive Director of the Duke University Talent Identification Program (TIP), formerly Executive Director of the Office of Engineering Outreach Programs (OEOP) and Director of the Minority Introduction to Engineering and Science (MITES) Program at MIT. Ms. Young received a BS in Chemistry from Howard University and MAT in Science Education from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She has a great deal of experience working with students and helping them prepare for college and careers in science.

Contact

With questions, contact PRIMES Program Director Slava Gerovitch at