Sarah Witherspoon

Sarah Witherspoon

Sarah Jane Witherspoon is an American mathematician interested in topics in abstract algebra, including Hochschild cohomology[SW99] and quantum groups.[W96][BW04] She is a professor of mathematics at Texas A&M University[1]

Witherspoon graduated from Arizona State University in 1988,[1] where she earned the Charles Wexler Mathematics Prize as the best mathematics student at ASU that year.[2] She went on to graduate study in mathematics at the University of Chicago, and completed her Ph.D. in 1994.[1] Her dissertation, supervised by Jonathan Lazare Alperin, was The Representation Ring of the Quantum Double of a Finite Group.[3]

Witherspoon taught at the University of Toronto from 1994 to 1998. After holding visiting assistant professorships at Mills College, the University of Wisconsin–Madison, Mount Holyoke College, the University of Massachusetts Amherst, and Amherst College, she joined the Texas A&M faculty in 2004.[1]

She was elected to the 2018 class of fellows of the American Mathematical Society, "for contributions to representation theory and cohomology of Hopf algebras, quantum groups, and related objects, and for service to the profession and mentoring".[4]

Selected publications

W96.Witherspoon, S. J. (1996), "The representation ring of the quantum double of a finite group", Journal of Algebra, 179 (1): 305–329, doi:10.1006/jabr.1996.0014, MR 1367852
SW99.Siegel, Stephen F.; Witherspoon, Sarah J. (1999), "The Hochschild cohomology ring of a group algebra", Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society, Third Series, 79 (1): 131–157, doi:10.1112/S0024611599011958, MR 1687539
BW04.Benkart, Georgia; Witherspoon, Sarah (2004), "Two-parameter quantum groups and Drinfel'd doubles", Algebras and Representation Theory, 7 (3): 261–286, arXiv:math/0011064, doi:10.1023/B:ALGE.0000031151.86090.2e, MR 2070408

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Curriculum vitae, retrieved 2017-11-03
  2. Charles Wexler Awards, Arizona State University School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, retrieved 2017-11-04
  3. Sarah Witherspoon at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  4. 2018 Class of the Fellows of the AMS, American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2017-11-03
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