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Sourav Chatterjee FRS (born 26 November 1979)[1] is an Indian Bengali mathematician from West Bengal, specializing in mathematical statistics and probability theory. Chatterjee is credited with work on the study of fluctuations in random structures, concentration and super-concentration inequalities, Poisson and other non-normal limits, first-passage percolation, Stein's method and spin glasses.[2][3] He has received a Sloan Fellowship in mathematics, Tweedie Award,[4] Rollo Davidson Prize, Doeblin Prize, Loève Prize, and Infosys Prize in mathematical sciences. He was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 2014.
Sourav Chatterjee | |
---|---|
Born | Kolkata, India | 26 November 1979
Alma mater | Indian Statistical Institute Stanford University |
Awards | Sloan Research Fellowship (2007) Rollo Davidson Prize (2010) Doeblin Prize (2012) Loève Prize (2013) Infosys Prize (2020) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Mathematics |
Institutions | Stanford University University of California at Berkeley New York University (Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences) |
Doctoral advisor | Persi Diaconis |
Career
editChatterjee received a Bachelor and Master of Statistics from Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata, and a Ph.D. from Stanford University in 2005, where he worked under the supervision of Persi Diaconis.[5] Chatterjee joined University of California, Berkeley, as a visiting assistant professor, then received a tenure-track Assistant Professor position in 2006. In July 2009 he became an Associate Professor of Statistics and Mathematics at University of California, Berkeley. Then in September 2009, Chatterjee became an associate professor of mathematics at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University.[6] He spent the academic year 2012–2013 as a visiting associate professor of mathematics and statistics at Stanford University. Since autumn 2013 he has joined the faculty of Stanford University as a full professor with joint appointments in the departments of Mathematics and Statistics.[7]
He has served as an associate editor of Annals of Probability, Annales de l'Institut Henri Poincaré (B) Probabilities et Statistiques, "Probability Theory and Related Fields". He currently serves as an editor of Communications in Mathematical Physics.[8]
Awards and honours
edit- 2008 Tweedie New Researcher Award, from the Institute of Mathematical Statistics.[9]
- Sloan Research Fellowship in Mathematics, 2007–2009[citation needed]
- Rollo Davidson Prize 2010[citation needed]
- IMS Medallion Lecture, 2012[10]
- Inaugural Wolfgang Doeblin Prize in Probability, 2012[citation needed]
- Loève Prize 2013[citation needed]
- ICM Invited talk, 2014[11]
- Infosys Prize 2020[citation needed]
- Fellow of the Royal Society 2023[12]
- Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 2024[13]
References
edit- ^ "About Me" Archived 2010-06-13 at the Wayback Machine, Sourav Chatterjee homepage at the University of California at Berkeley.
- ^ "Institute of Mathematical Statistics | 2008 Tweedie Award".
- ^ "Infosys Prize - Laureates 2020 - Prof. Sourav Chatterjee".
- ^ "Institute of Mathematical Statistics | IMS Awards Recipients".
- ^ *Sourav Chatterjee at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ^ CV at Berkeley Archived 2013-09-25 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "About me", Sourav Chatterjee homepage at Stanford University.
- ^ "Sourav Chatterjee's Profile | Stanford Profiles".
- ^ "Institute of Mathematical Statistics | IMS Awards Recipients".
- ^ World-class speakers for World Congress, 10 June 2011 Institute of Mathematical Statistics Bulletin
- ^ "Sourav Chatterjee".
- ^ "Sourav Chatterjee". royalsociety.org. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
- ^ "Sourav Chatterjee".