Jennifer Tour Chayes | |
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Born | |
Alma mater | Wesleyan University Princeton University |
Known for | Phase transitions Discrete mathematics Graph theory Game theory Network theory |
Spouse | Christian Borgs |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Physics Mathematics Theoretical computer science |
Institutions | UC Berkeley Microsoft Research New England Microsoft Research New York City UCLA Cornell University Harvard University |
Thesis | The Inverse Problem, Plaquette Percolation and a Generalized Potts Model (1983) |
Doctoral advisor | Elliott H. Lieb Michael Aizenman |
Jennifer Tour Chayes is dean of the college of computing, data science, and society at the University of California, Berkeley. Before joining Berkeley, she was a technical fellow and managing director of Microsoft Research New England in Cambridge, Massachusetts, which she founded in 2008, and Microsoft Research New York City, which she founded in 2012.[1]
Chayes is best known for her work on phase transitions in discrete mathematics and computer science, structural and dynamical properties of self-engineered networks, and algorithmic game theory. She is considered one of the world's experts in the modeling and analysis of dynamically growing graphs.[2]
Chayes joined Microsoft Research in 1997, when she co-founded the Theory Group. She received her Ph.D. in mathematical physics at Princeton University in 1983. She is affiliate professor of mathematics and physics at the University of Washington, and was a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Los Angeles from 1987 to 2001. She is an author on almost 120 scientific papers and the inventor on more than 25 patents.