Paul Seymour | |
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Born | Plymouth, Devon, England | 26 July 1950
Nationality | British |
Alma mater | University of Oxford (BA, PhD) |
Awards | Sloan Fellowship (1983) Ostrowski Prize (2003) George Pólya Prize (1983, 2004) Fulkerson Prize (1979, 1994, 2006, 2009) |
Scientific career | |
Institutions | Princeton University Bellcore University of Waterloo Rutgers University Ohio State University |
Doctoral advisor | Aubrey William Ingleton |
Doctoral students | Maria Chudnovsky Sang-il Oum |
Paul D. Seymour FRS (born 26 July 1950) is a British mathematician known for his work in discrete mathematics, especially graph theory. He (with others) was responsible for important progress on regular matroids and totally unimodular matrices, the four colour theorem, linkless embeddings, graph minors and structure, the perfect graph conjecture, the Hadwiger conjecture, claw-free graphs, χ-boundedness, and the Erdős–Hajnal conjecture. Many of his recent papers are available from his website.[1]
Seymour is currently the Albert Baldwin Dod Professor of Mathematics at Princeton University.[2] He won a Sloan Fellowship in 1983, and the Ostrowski Prize in 2003;[3] and (sometimes with others) won the Fulkerson Prize in 1979, 1994, 2006 and 2009, and the Pólya Prize in 1983 and 2004. He received an honorary doctorate from the University of Waterloo in 2008, one from the Technical University of Denmark in 2013, and one from the École normale supérieure de Lyon in 2022. He was an invited speaker in the 1986 International Congress of Mathematicians and a plenary speaker in the 1994 International Congress of Mathematicians. He became a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2022.[4]