Frederick R. Cohen


Frederick Ronald Cohen was an American mathematician working in algebraic topology.

Education and career

Fred Cohen was born in 1945 in Chicago. He received a BA from Brandeis University in 1967 and a PhD from the University of Chicago in 1972. He taught at the University of Northern Illinois until 1979 and then at the University of Kentucky. In 1989, he settled at the University of Rochester, where he spent the rest of his career.

Mathematics

Cohen did influential work in several areas of homotopy theory. His thesis concerned the topology of configuration spaces, a topic he came back to throughout his life, with connections to braid groups and mapping class groups. This was followed by a series of influential papers on unstable homotopy groups of spheres with John Moore and Joseph Neisendorfer. Late in his life, Cohen studied polyhedral products in a series of articles with Bahri, Bendersky, and Gitler.

Selected publications

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Personal life

In the mid 1970's, Cohen battled a spinal tumor. Although he survived with the help of radiation therapy, he was partially paralyzed for the rest of his life. Starting in 2013, he used a wheelchair.
Cohen was survived by his wife Kathleen and two daughters.