Maeve McCarthy

C. Maeve Lewis McCarthy is an Irish mathematician whose research interests include inverse problems and modelling biological systems. She is the Jesse D. Jones Endowed Professor of Mathematics at Murray State University in Kentucky.[1][2]

Education and career

McCarthy was born in Galway. She earned bachelor's and master's degrees in mathematical physics from NUI Galway, and then continued her studies in computational and applied mathematics at Rice University, where she earned a second master's degree and in 1997 a Ph.D.[3] Her dissertation, An Investigation of the Optimal Design of the Tallest Unloaded Column, was supervised by Steven J. Cox.[4]

After completing her Ph.D., she went to the University of South Florida and then, after a year, moved to Murray State in 1998.[1][5] She worked as executive director of the Association for Women in Mathematics from 2008 to 2011,[1][5] when she returned to Murray State as a full-time faculty member.[1] At Murray State, she is also the director of a project that "studies the recruitment and retention of women faculty in science at rural institutions".[1][6]

Recognition

McCarthy was named Jones Professor in 2015.[1][2] She was selected to join the 2019 class of fellows of the Association for Women in Mathematics "for her commitment to mentoring students and colleagues; for her inspired service as executive director of AWM; and for her stewardship of the ADVANCE project at Murray State University".[7]

gollark: See? BEE LIFESPANS.
gollark: ++remind 2y-2🐝
gollark: The negative timedeltas thing was a great idea without flaw utterly.
gollark: ++remind 3d-2h <@319753218592866315> make macron <@!330678593904443393>
gollark: As a new mRNA strand is generated by the action of the RNA polymerase II machinery on a stretch of DNA, it gets a “cap” attached to the end that’s coming out from the DNA (the “5-prime” end), a special nucleotide (7-methylguanosine) that’s used just for that purpose. But don’t get the idea that the new mRNA strand is just waving in the nucleoplasmic breeze – at all points, the developing mRNA is associated with a whole mound of specialized RNA-binding proteins that keep it from balling up on itself like a long strand of packing tape, which is what it would certainly end up doing otherwise.

References

  1. Maeve McCarthy (speaker biography), University of Washington Center for Institutional Change, 13 September 2018, retrieved 7 October 2018
  2. "Murray State Names Jesse D. Jones Endowed Professors", Blue & Gold, Murray State University, 29 April 2015
  3. Maeve Lewis McCarthy, Murray State University, retrieved 7 October 2018
  4. Doctoral degree recipients, Rice Computational and Applied Mathematics, retrieved 7 October 2018
  5. "Maeve L. McCarthy Named AWM Executive Director", Math in the News, Mathematical Association of America, 28 June 2008
  6. Erwin, Nicole (8 April 2016), Murray State Awarded $250,000 to Study Women in STEM, WKMS-FM
  7. 2019 Class of AWM Fellows, Association for Women in Mathematics, retrieved 26 January 2019
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