Gabriel Carroll
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (April 2009) |
Gabriel D. Carroll | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | MIT Harvard University |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Mathematics Mathematical economics |
Institutions | Stanford University Microsoft Research |
Doctoral advisor | Parag Pathak |
Gabriel Drew Carroll (born December 24, 1982)[1] is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Stanford University.[1] He graduated from Harvard with B.A. in mathematics and linguistics in 2005 and received his doctorate in economics from MIT in 2012. He was recognized as a child prodigy and received numerous awards in mathematics while a student.
Carroll won two gold medals (1998, 2001) and a silver medal (1999) at the International Mathematical Olympiad, earning a perfect score at the 2001 International Mathematical Olympiad held in Washington, D.C., shared only with American teammate Reid W. Barton and Chinese teammates Liang Xiao and Zhiqiang Zhang.[2][3][4]
Gabriel earned a place among the top five ranked competitors (who are themselves not ranked against each other) in the William Lowell Putnam Competition all four years that he was eligible (2000–2003), a feat matched by only seven others (Don Coppersmith (1968–1971), Arthur Rubin (1970–1973), Bjorn Poonen (1985–1988), Ravi Vakil (1988–1991), Reid W. Barton (2001–2004), Daniel Kane (2003–2006), and Brian R. Lawrence (2007–08, 2010–11). His top-5 performance in 2000 was particularly notable, as he was officially taking the exam in spite of only being a high school senior, thus forfeiting one of his years of eligibility in college. He was on the first place Putnam team twice (2001–02) and the second place team once (2003).
He has earned awards in science and math, including the Intel Science Talent Search, has taught mathematics classes and tutorials, and plays the piano. He was a Research Science Institute scholar in 2000.[5]
Carroll proposed Problem 3 of IMO 2009 and Problem 3 of IMO 2010. He also proposes problems to the USAMO such as problem 3 in 2007, 2008, 2010 and problem 6 in 2009.
During the 2005-06 academic year, he taught English[1] in Chaling, Hunan, China. He worked at the National Bureau of Economic Research from 2006 to 2007.[1]
Education
Gabriel Carroll is an alumnus of Oakland Technical High School and graduated from Harvard University in 2005 with degrees in Mathematics and Linguistics. He graduated from the Economics Department at MIT in 2012, and spent one year at Microsoft Research as a postdoctoral researcher during 2012-2013.[1]
References
- ^ a b c d e "Curriculum Vitae" (PDF).
- ^ "Individual IMO results".
- ^ "2001 IMO Results".
- ^ "2001 IMO Information".
- ^ Stankova, Zvezdelina; Rike, Tom (eds.), A Decade of the Berkeley Math Circle: The American Experience, Volume I, MSRI Mathematical Circles Library, American Mathematical Society, p. 295, ISBN 9780821884331,
Gabriel Carroll was a high school junior when he took time off from IMO participation to work at the Research Science Institute at MIT.