Paul Seymour
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This article is about the mathematician. For the basketball coach, see Paul Seymour (basketball).
Paul Seymour (born July 26, 1950) is a mathematician working in graph theory, combinatorics and optimization and discrete mathematics at Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, United States.
Seymour was born in Plymouth, Devon, England. He was a day student at Plymouth College, and finished first nationwide in the University of Oxford entrance exam. He studied at Exeter College, Oxford, and received several degrees: BA in 1971, MSc in 1972, MA in 1975, and D.Phil in 1975.
He was responsible for pioneering breakthroughs on totally unimodular matrices, the four colour theorem, Robertson-Seymour theorem graph minors series, strong perfect graph theorem, the Hadwiger conjecture, and claw-free graphs. He won the Fulkerson Prize in 1979, 1994, and 2006, the Pólya Prize in 1983 and 2004, and the Ostrowski Prize in 2004, among others.
He became full professor at Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, in 1983. From 1983 until 1996, he was at Bell Labs, then Bellcore (Bell Communications Research) Morristown, New Jersey (now Telcordia Technologies). He became professor at Princeton University in 1996, and is Editor-in-Chief for the Journal of Graph Theory. He married Shelley MacDonald Seymour of Ottawa in 1979, and they have two children.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Paul Seymour, home page at Princeton