Mila Nikolova

Mila Nikolova (1962 – June 20, 2018) was a Bulgarian applied mathematician, known for her research in image processing, inverse problems, and compressed sensing.[1][2][3][4]

Education and career

After working as a science journalist and engineer in Bulgaria, Nikolova completed a Ph.D. in 1995 in signal and image processing at the University of Paris-Sud.[1] In 2006, she earned a habilitation in mathematics at Pierre and Marie Curie University.[5]

She did postdoctoral research with Électricité de France, and then joined the faculty at Paris Descartes University in 1996. In 1999 she was given a position as senior research fellow at CNRS, associated at first with the École nationale supérieure des télécommunications and since 2003 with the École normale supérieure Cachan. She became a director of research at CNRS in 2009.[5]

Recognition

Nikolova won the Michel-Monpetit Prize of the French Academy of Sciences in 2010, "for the originality and depth of her research in mathematical image processing and in solving certain inverse problems".[1][6]

The Journal of Mathematical Imaging and Vision has published a posthumous special issue in honor of Nikolova.[3]

gollark: You can be LyricLy (hyperreal).
gollark: I don't think their growth rate is even quadratic, let alone exponential.
gollark: Irrelevant.
gollark: (scheduled for 2026)
gollark: Notably, this is 2 years after the apioforms and [REDACTED] complete contamination of all human memeplexes [DATA LOST AT DRAMATICALLY APPROPRIATE POINT] sparing of none.

References

  1. Steidl, Gabriele (August 22, 2018), "A Tribute to Mila Nikolova", SIAM News
  2. "A tribute to Professor Mila Nikolova (1962–2018)", INI news, Isaac Newton Institute, June 28, 2018
  3. "Special Issue on Memory of Mila Nikolova", Journal of Mathematical Imaging and Vision, 62 (6–7), July 2020
  4. Mila Nikolova : une vie dans la recherche... (in French), Centre de Mathématiques et Leurs Applications, École normale supérieure Paris-Saclay
  5. Curriculum vitae, retrieved May 29, 2019
  6. Prix Michel Monpetit, Lauréats Précédents (PDF) (in French), French Academy of Sciences, retrieved May 29, 2019
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