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Heather Harrington

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Heather A. Harrington (born 1984)[1] is an applied mathematician interested in dynamical systems, chemical reaction network theory, topological data analysis, and systems biology. She is an associate professor of applied algebra and data science, and Royal Society University Research Fellow at the Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, where she heads the Algebraic Systems Biology group.[2]

Education and career

Harrington went to Concord-Carlisle High School in Massachusetts.[1] As an applied mathematics student at the University of Massachusetts Amherst she won a Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship,[3] and graduated summa cum laude from in 2006.[4] She completed her Ph.D. in 2010 at Imperial College London. Her dissertation, Mathematical models of cellular decisions, was jointly supervised by Jaroslav Stark and Dorothy Buck.[4][5]

After postdoctoral research in theoretical systems biology at Imperial from 2010 to 2013, she joined the Mathematical Institute at Oxford as Hooke Research Fellow and EPSRC Postdoctoral Research Fellow,[4] and as Junior Research Fellow at St Cross College, Oxford.[6] In 2017, she became an associate professor and Royal Society University Research Fellow at Oxford.[4][6]

Recognition

In 2018 Harrington was one of the winners of the Whitehead Prize of the London Mathematical Society.[7] She was a co-winner of the 2019 Adams Prize of the University of Cambridge, which had the topic 'The Mathematics of Networks'.[8]

References

  1. ^ a b Birth date from Harrington's profile as a member of the UMass Amherst 2005-06 Women's Rowing Roster
  2. ^ Algebraic Systems Biology, Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, retrieved 2018-11-13
  3. ^ Student named Goldwater Scholar, UMass Amherst News & Media Relations, 14 April 2005, retrieved 2018-11-13
  4. ^ a b c d Curriculum vitae (PDF), January 2018, retrieved 2018-11-13
  5. ^ Heather Harrington at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  6. ^ a b Bedrock, Ella (9 December 2016), Fellow Dr Heather Harrington Awarded Royal Society Research Fellowship, St Cross College, Oxford
  7. ^ "Prizes of the London Mathematical Society" (PDF), Mathematics People, Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 65 (9): 1122, October 2018
  8. ^ Adams Prize, Faculty of Mathematics, University of Cambridge, retrieved 2019-02-28