Gunnar Carlsson
Gunnar E. Carlsson is an American mathematician, working in algebraic topology. He is known for his work on the Segal conjecture, and for his work on applied algebraic topology, especially topological data analysis. He is a Professor Emeritus in the Department of Mathematics at Stanford University. He is the founder and president of the predictive technology company Ayasdi.
Biography
Carlsson was born in Sweden and was educated in the United States. He graduated from Redwood High School (Larkspur, California) in 1969. He received a Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1976, with a dissertation written under the supervision of R. J. Milgram. He was a Dickson Assistant Professor at the University of Chicago and Professor at the University of California, San Diego, Princeton University, and Stanford University where he held the Anne and Bill Swindells Professorship and was Chair of the Department of Mathematics from 1995 to 1998.He was an Ordway Visiting Professor at the University of Minnesota and held a Sloan Foundation Research Fellowship. He has delivered an invited address at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Berkeley, California, in 1986; a plenary address at the annual meeting of the American Mathematical Society ; the Whittaker Colloquium at the University of Edinburgh ; the Rademacher Lectures at the University of Pennsylvania ; and an invited plenary address at the annual meeting of the Society of Industrial and Applied Mathematics.
He was elected as a member of the 2017 class of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society "for contributions to algebraic topology, particularly equivariant stable homotopy theory, algebraic K-theory, and applied algebraic topology".
In 2008, Carlsson cofounded Ayasdi, a predictive technology based on big data, machine learning and artificial intelligence.