Vanessa Robins

Vanessa Robins is an Australian applied mathematician whose research interests include computational topology, image processing, and the structure of granular materials. She is a fellow in the departments of applied mathematics and theoretical physics at Australian National University, where she was ARC Future Fellow from 2014 to 2019.[1]

Education

Robins earned a bachelor's degree in mathematics at Australian National University in 1994.[1] She completed a PhD at the University of Colorado Boulder in 2000. Her dissertation, Computational Topology at Multiple Resolutions: Foundations and Applications to Fractals and Dynamics, was jointly supervised by James D. Meiss and Elizabeth Bradley.[2]

Contributions

One of Robins' publications, from 1999, is one of the three works that independently introduced persistent homology in topological data analysis.[3] As well as working on mathematical research, she has collaborated with artist Julie Brooke, of the Australian National University School of Art & Design, on the mathematical visualization of topological surfaces.[4]

gollark: No.
gollark: (*self*-replicated because it's potatOS)
gollark: It is merely patterns of bits self-replicated onto various hard drives.
gollark: I mean, PotatOS "exists", but isn't a physical object.
gollark: Not really.

References

  1. "Dr Vanessa Robins", People, Australian National University Research School of Physics, retrieved 2020-05-04
  2. Vanessa Robins at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. Edelsbrunner, Herbert; Morozov, Dmitriy (2013), "Persistent homology: theory and practice" (PDF), European Congress of Mathematics, Eur. Math. Soc., Zürich, pp. 31–50, MR 3469114
  4. "The art of science in jewellery, metal, tape and music", Science in Public, 9 December 2014, retrieved 2020-05-04; "Julie Brooke: Minimal Surfaces", Art Almanac, 30 March 2015, retrieved 2020-05-04
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