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Igor Pak

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Igor Pak (Template:Lang-ru) (born 1971, Moscow, Soviet Union) is a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Los Angeles, working in combinatorics and discrete probability. He formerly taught at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the University of Minnesota and is best known for his bijective proof of the hook-length formula for the number of Young tableaux, and his work on random walks. He was a keynote speaker alongside George Andrews and Doron Zeilberger at the 2006 Harvey Mudd College Mathematics Conference on Enumerative Combinatorics.

Pak is an Associate Editor for the journal Discrete Mathematics[1] and an Editor (responsible for combinatorics and discrete geometry) of the Transactions of the American Mathematical Society.[2] He gave a Fejes Tóth Lecture at the University of Calgary in February 2009.[3]

Background

Pak went to Moscow High School № 57. After graduating, he worked for a year at Bank Menatep.

Pak did his undergraduate studies at Moscow State University. He was a Ph.D. student of Persi Diaconis at Harvard University, where he received a PhD in Mathematics in 1997.[4] Afterwards, he worked with László Lovász as a postdoc at Yale University. He was a fellow at the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute, and a long term visitor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

References

  1. ^ Editorial Board, Discrete Mathematics, Elsevier. Accessed February 10, 2010
  2. ^ Editorial Board, Transactions of the American Mathematical Society. Accessed September 16, 2016
  3. ^ Fejes Tóth Lecture, Centre for Computational and Discrete Geometry, University of Calgary. Accessed February 10, 2010
  4. ^ *Igor Pak at the Mathematics Genealogy Project. Accessed February 10, 2010