Jill P. Mesirov

Jill P. Mesirov is an American mathematician, computer scientist, and computational biologist who was the associate director and chief informatics officer at the Eli and Edythe L. Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. She also holds an adjunct faculty position at Boston University.

Jill Mesirov
Born
Jill P. Mesirov
Alma materBrandeis University (PhD)
AwardsISCB Fellow (2012)[1]
Scientific career
InstitutionsBroad Institute
Boston University
ThesisPerturbation theory for the existence of critical points in the calculus of variations (1974)
Doctoral advisorRichard Palais[2]
Websitewww.broadinstitute.org/bios/jill-p-mesirov

Education

Mesirov did her undergraduate studies at the University of Pennsylvania,[3] and earned a doctorate in mathematics from Brandeis University in 1974, under the supervision of Richard Palais.[2]

Research and career

Her research concerns high-performance computing.[3] Effective July 1, 2015, she has been appointed Associate Vice Chancellor for Computational Health Sciences and Professor of Medicine at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and Moores Cancer Center.[4]

She has worked at the University of California, Berkeley, the American Mathematical Society, Thinking Machines Corporation, and IBM before joining the Whitehead Institute of MIT in 1997, which eventually became part of the Broad Institute.[3] She was president of the Association for Women in Mathematics from 1989 to 1991.[5]

Awards and honors

Mesirov became a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1996.[6] In 2012, she was elected an ISCB Fellow by the International Society for Computational Biology in 2012,[1][7] and one of the inaugural fellows of the American Mathematical Society.[8] In 2017, she was selected as a fellow of the Association for Women in Mathematics in the inaugural class.[9]

Publications

  • (co-ed.) Mathematical Approaches to Biomolecular Structure and Dynamics. The IMA Volumes in Mathematics and its Applications, avec Klaus Schulten et De Witt Sumners, Springer, 254p. ISBN 1461284856
  • (coll.) Research in Computational Molecular Biology, 9th Annual International Conference, RECOMB 2005, Cambridge, MA, USA, May 14–18, 2005, Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Computer Science), Springer, 632p. ISBN 3540258663
  • Very Large Scale Computing in the 21st Century, Society for Industrial & Applied Mathematics, 1991, 345p. ISBN 0898712793
gollark: Not really, since I just won't.
gollark: What I'm saying is that while most of the game would stay the same, I would have to write a lot of annoying rendering code.
gollark: Of course. Changing the rendering doesn't change the logic much.
gollark: I would, nevertheless, have to actually position all the cube faces, or make an entirely new isometric-only renderer and paint on hexagons.
gollark: If you want the thing on the left, then that has cubes in it, see.

References

  1. Anon (2017). "ISCB Fellows". iscb.org. International Society for Computational Biology. Archived from the original on 2017-03-20.
  2. Jill P. Mesirov at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. Profile, Broad Institute, retrieved 2015-02-22.
  4. "UCSD School of Medicine retrieved 2015-06-26".
  5. Taylor, Jean E.; Wiegand, Sylvia M. (1999), "AWM in the 1990s: a recent history of the Association for Women in Mathematics" (PDF), Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 46 (1): 27–38, MR 1658878.
  6. "AAAS Fellows Elected" (PDF), Mathematics People, Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 43 (4): 451, April 1996.
  7. People in the News: Bonnie Berger, Peter Karp, Jill Mesirov, Pavel Pevzner, Ron Shamir, Martin Vingron, genomeweb, July 13, 2012, retrieved 2015-02-22.
  8. List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2015-02-22.
  9. "Launch of the AWM Fellows Program". Association for Women in Mathematics. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
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