Brooke Shipley

Brooke Elizabeth Shipley is an American mathematician. She works as a professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, where she is head of the Department of Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science.[1] Her research concerns homotopy theory and homological algebra.[2]

Brooke Shipley
Alma materMassachusetts Institute of Technology
Harvard College
AwardsSloan Research Fellow (2002–2006)
NSF CAREER Award (2002–2009)
NSF ADVANCE (2006–2012)
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsUniversity of Illinois at Chicago
Purdue University
University of Chicago
University of Notre Dame
Doctoral advisorHaynes Miller

Education and career

Shipley graduated from Harvard University in 1990.[1] She earned her Ph.D. in 1995 from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, under the supervision of Haynes Miller, for her work on the convergence of the homology spectral sequence of a cosimplicial space.[3]

Shipley then was awarded a NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellowship. After postdoctoral studies at the University of Notre Dame and the University of Chicago, she joined the faculty of Purdue University in 1998 and earned tenure there in 2002.[4] She then moved to University of Illinois at Chicago in 2003.[1]

In 2009, Shipley became Co-Principal Investigator on UIC's National Science Foundation's ADVANCE grant to support the Women in Science and Engineering System Transformation (WISEST) program. She served as the director of WISEST from 2012 to 2013.[4]

Recognition

In 2014, she was elected as a fellow of the American Mathematical Society "for contributions to homotopy theory and homological algebra as well as for service to the mathematical community."[2] Then in 2016, she became a representative of the Committee of Academic Sponsors at the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute [5]

Selected Papers

  • Brooke Shipley, HZ-algebra spectra are differential graded algebras, American Journal of Mathematics, 129(2):351–379, 2007. MR2306038
  • Hovey, Mark; Shipley, Brooke; Smith, Jeff (2000), "Symmetric spectra", Journal of the American Mathematical Society, 13 (1): 149–208, doi:10.1090/S0894-0347-99-00320-3, MR 1695653

Awards

  • NSF Career Award (2002-2009)[1]
  • Purdue University School of Science Outstanding Assistant Professor (2001)

References

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