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Named Postdoctoral Fellows

Berlekamp

As Professor Emeritus of Mathematics and EECS at UC Berkeley, Elwyn Berlekamp (1940-2019) was famous for his work in coding theory and combinatorial game theory. His passion for mathematical puzzles and problems dated back to his years as an undergraduate student, when he illustrated himself as one of the five top scorers in the notoriously difficult Putnam competition. Dr. Berlekamp was well known for the Welch-Berlekamp and Berlekamp–Massey algorithms, which are used to implement Reed–Solomon error correction. In addition, he co-authored the books Winning Ways for your Mathematical Plays and Mathematical Go

Dr. Berlekamp was also the recipient of several honors and prizes. In 1991, he received the IEEE Richard W. Hamming Medal, and in 1993, the Claude E. Shannon Award, and in 1998, a Golden Jubilee Award for Technological Innovation from the IEEE Information Theory Society. Elwyn Berlekamp was a member of the National Academy of Engineering and of the National Academy of Sciences. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1996, and became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society in 2013.

The Berlekamp Postdoctoral Fellowship was established in 2014 by a group of his friends—colleagues and former students whose lives have been touched by Dr. Berlekamp in many ways.

Berlekamp Fellows

  • Saman Habibi Esfahani

    Saman Habibi Esfahani

    PhD, State University of New York, Stony Brook
    Berlekamp Fellow,
    Fall 2022
    Analytic and Geometric Aspects of Gauge Theory
  • Mikhail Hlushchanka

    Mikhail Hlushchanka

    PhD, Jacobs University Bremen
    Berlekamp Fellow,
    Spring 2022
    Complex Dynamics: From Special Families to Natural Generalizations in One and Several Variables
  • Hui Zhu

    Hui Zhu

    PhD, Université de Paris XI
    Berlekamp Fellow,
    Spring 2021
    Mathematical Problems in Fluid Dynamics
  • Nicolle Sandoval Gonzalez

    Nicolle Sandoval Gonzalez

    PhD, University of Southern California
    Berlekamp Fellow,
    Spring 2020
    Higher Categories and Categorification
  • Piotr Achinger

    Piotr Achinger

    PhD, University of California, Berkeley
    Berlekamp Fellow,
    Spring 2019
    Derived Algebraic Geometry
  • Tomasz Tkocz

    Tomasz Tkocz

    PhD, University of Warwick
    Berlekamp Fellow,
    Fall 2017
    Geometric Functional Analysis and Applications
  • Maria Nastasescu

    Maria Nastasescu

    PhD, California Institute of Technology
    Berlekamp Fellow,
    Spring 2017
    Analytic Number Theory
  • Georg Menz

    Georg Menz

    PhD, University of Bonn
    Berlekamp Fellow,
    Fall 2015
    New Challenges in PDE: Deterministic Dynamics and Randomness in High and Infinite Dimensional Systems
  • Bao Viet Le Hung

    Bao Viet Le Hung

    PhD, Harvard University
    Berlekamp Fellow,
    Spring 2015
    New Geometric Methods in Number Theory and Automorphic Forms

Cha-Chern

The Cha-Chern scholarship combines two funds that were established by Johnson Cha and the family of Shiing-Shen Chern. Both funds are designated to support Chinese scholars during their stay at MSRI.

Shiing-Shen Chern (1911–2004) was an outstanding contributor to research in differential geometry and devised the now named Chern characteristic classes in fibre spaces. He also gave proof of the famous Gauss-Bonnet formula. Chern received an M.S. degree from Tsinghua University in Beijing, and a doctor of sciences degree from the University of Hamburg (Germany). In 1949, Chern accepted the chair of geometry at the University of Chicago and moved to the University of California, Berkeley, in 1960. He was elected member of the United States National Academy of Sciences a year later. After his retirement from UC Berkeley, Chern was one of the three founders of MSRI and acted as its first director (1981–84). He was awarded the National Medal of Science in 1975 and the Wolf Prize in 1983.


Johnson Cha served on MSRI’s Board of Trustees from 2000 to 2004. During this time, Mr. Cha created a fund to support Chinese scholars during their stay at MSRI. Mr. Cha is Managing Director of the Mingly Corporation, a Hong Kong investment company focused on building technology companies in the Silicon Valley and the Asia Pacific region, especially China. Mr. Cha holds a BS in Chemistry from Carnegie Mellon University and an MBA from Stanford's Graduate School of Business.

Cha-Chern Fellows

  • Yueh-Ju Lin

    Yueh-Ju Lin

    PhD, University of Notre Dame
    Cha-Chern Fellow,
    Spring 2016
    Differential Geometry
  • Qiongling Li

    Qiongling Li

    PhD, Rice University
    Cha-Chern Fellow,
    Spring 2015
    Dynamics on Moduli Spaces of Geometric Structures
  • Yaping Yang

    Yaping Yang

    PhD, Northeastern University
    Cha-Chern Fellow,
    Fall 2014
    Geometric Representation Theory
  • Haotian Wu

    Haotian Wu

    PhD, University of Texas
    Cha-Chern Fellow,
    Fall 2013
    Mathematical General Relativity

Stephen Della Pietra

Stephen Della Pietra

Stephen Della Pietra received his bachelor’s degree in physics from Princeton University in 1981, and his PhD in mathematical physics from Harvard University in 1986. From 1987 to 1988, he was a postdoctoral fellow at The University of Texas at Austin. From 1988 to 1989, he was a member at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton.

From 1989 to 1995, he was a research staff member at the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights and Hawthorne, New York. As a project leader of the natural language understanding group, his primary research focused on machine translation and natural language understanding. In 1995 he joined Renaissance Technologies, where he currently co-manages the General Research Group and works on statistical methods to model the stock market.

Stephen is co-founder of the Della Pietra Lecture Series at Stony Brook University. This series brings world-renowned scientists to the Simons Center for Geometry and Physics, and is intended to bring awareness of recent and impactful discoveries in physics and mathematics to high school, undergraduate and graduate students. Stephen is a board member of the Simons Center for Geometry and Physics, is on the advisory council of the astrophysics department at Princeton University, as treasurer of the National Museum of Mathematics in New York, and is a board member of the nonprofit organization PIVOT.

Stephen Della Pietra Fellows

  • Gregorio Baldi

    Gregorio Baldi

    PhD, University College London
    Stephen Della Pietra Fellow,
    Spring 2023
    Diophantine Geometry
  • Peter Lin

    Peter Lin

    PhD, University of Washington
    Stephen Della Pietra Fellow,
    Spring 2022
    The Analysis and Geometry of Random Spaces
  • Matthew Novack

    Matthew Novack

    PhD, University of California, Santa Barbara
    Stephen Della Pietra Fellow,
    Spring 2021
    Mathematical Problems in Fluid Dynamics
  • Colleen Delaney

    Colleen Delaney

    PhD, University of California, Santa Barbara
    Stephen Della Pietra Fellow,
    Spring 2020
    Quantum Symmetries
  • D. Lukas B. Brantner

    D. Lukas B. Brantner

    PhD, Harvard University
    Stephen Della Pietra Fellow,
    Spring 2019
    Derived Algebraic Geometry
  • Liran Rotem

    Liran Rotem

    PhD, Tel Aviv University
    Stephen Della Pietra Fellow,
    Fall 2017
    Geometric Functional Analysis and Applications

Vincent Della Pietra

Vincent Della Pietra

Vincent Della Pietra received his bachelor’s degree in physics from Princeton University in 1981, and his PhD in mathematical physics from Harvard University in 1986. From 1987 to 1988, he was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Texas at Austin. From 1988 to 1989, he conducted postdoctoral research at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton.

From 1989 to 1995, he was a research staff member at the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights and Hawthorne, New York. As a project leader of the natural language understanding group, his primary research focused on machine translation and natural language understanding. In 1995 he joined Renaissance Technologies, where he currently co-manages the General Research Group and works on statistical methods to model the stock market.

Vincent is co-founder of the Della Pietra Lecture Series at Stony Brook University. This series brings world-renowned scientists to the Simons Center for Geometry and Physics, and is intended to bring awareness of recent and impactful discoveries in physics and mathematics to high school, undergraduate and graduate students. He also serves as a board member of the nonprofit organization PIVOT.

Vincent Della Pietra Fellows

  • Gabriel Dill

    Gabriel Dill

    PhD, Universität Basel
    Vincent Della Pietra Fellow,
    Spring 2023
    Diophantine Geometry
  • Leticia Pardo Simon

    Leticia Pardo Simon

    PhD, University of Liverpool
    Vincent Della Pietra Fellow,
    Spring 2022
    Complex Dynamics: From Special Families to Natural Generalizations in One and Several Variables
  • Esther Elbaz Saban

    Esther Elbaz Saban

    PhD, Université de Paris VII (Denis Diderot)
    Vincent Della Pietra Fellow,
    Fall 2020
    Decidability, Definability and Computability in Number Theory
  • Laura Fredrickson

    Laura Fredrickson

    PhD, University of Texas, Austin
    Vincent Della Pietra Fellow,
    Fall 2019
    Holomorphic Differentials in Mathematics and Physics
  • Yuchen Liu

    Yuchen Liu

    PhD, Princeton University
    Vincent Della Pietra Fellow,
    Spring 2019
    Birational Geometry and Moduli Spaces
  • Inna Entova-Aizenbud

    Inna Entova-Aizenbud

    PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Vincent Della Pietra Fellow,
    Spring 2018
    Group Representation Theory and Applications

Donoho

The Donoho scholarship was established in 2022 by Dr. David Donoho and Dr. Miriam (Miki) Donoho.

David Donoho is best known for coining the term 'compressed sensing' while proposing a method for speeding up signals acquisition and reconstruction that today is used in MRI scanners by GE, Siemens and Philips serving millions of patients yearly. He received an A.B. in Statistics from Princeton summa cum laude, and a Ph.D. in Statistics from Harvard University. Dr. Donoho has served on the faculties at UC Berkeley and Stanford University. He has also worked in industry, in oil exploration (Western Geophysical), information technology (co-founding BigFix, Inc., which was acquired by IBM), and quantitative finance (Renaissance Technologies). Donoho is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Sciences, and a Foreign Associate of the French Académie des Sciences.

Donoho received honorary degrees from the University of Chicago, the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, The Technion (Haifa, Israel) and the University of Waterloo (Waterloo, Ontario), and has received a MacArthur Fellowship, the Committee of Presidents of Statistical Societies Presidents’ award, and the Norbert Wiener Prize of the American Mathematical Society. In 2013, he received the Shaw Prize in Mathematical Sciences. Donoho was awarded the Gauss Prize at the 2018 International Congress of Mathematicians.

Donoho Fellows

  • Inbar Klang

    Inbar Klang

    PhD, Stanford University
    Donoho Fellow,
    Fall 2022
    Floer Homotopy Theory

Gamelin

Theodore Gamelin graduated from Yale with a BS in 1960, and obtained his PhD at Berkeley in 1963. After several years spent between MIT and Argentina, Dr. Gamelin joined the UCLA mathematics department in 1968, where his career span 40 years. The main focus of his research has been in the area between functional analysis and complex analysis. He authored several publications including a couple of research monographs on function algebras and a textbook on complex analysis. He also co-authored a textbook on topology with Robert Greene, and a monograph on complex dynamical systems with Lennart Carleson. In the course of his career Dr. Gamelin was a Alfred P. Sloan Fellow, an Alexander von Humboldt Senior Fellow at the Universität des Saarlandes, Germany, and a Distinguished Visiting Professor at Brown University.

Dr. Gamelin became deeply involved in mathematics education in the late 1990s, initially as a math specialist in connection with the California approval process for school math textbooks, and then in 1999 as faculty advisor to the California Mathematics Project, the headquarters of which moved to UCLA. Dr. Gamelin continues to be involved in writing projects for a California nonprofit group (CMAT), whose current focus is on middle school mathematics. He is a primary author of several math textbooks which have gone through the California state approval process.

Dr. Gamelin established the Gamelin Postdoctoral Fellowship in 2014 through a generous endowment gift to MSRI to support and foster young mathematical talents.

Gamelin Fellows

  • Stephanie Chan

    Stephanie Chan

    PhD, University College London
    Gamelin Fellow,
    Spring 2023
    Diophantine Geometry
  • Milind Hegde

    Milind Hegde

    PhD, University of California, Berkeley
    Gamelin Fellow,
    Fall 2021
    Universality and Integrability in Random Matrix Theory and Interacting Particle Systems
  • Soumya Sankar

    Soumya Sankar

    PhD, University of Wisconsin-Madison
    Gamelin Fellow,
    Fall 2020
    Random and Arithmetic Structures in Topology
  • Katrina Morgan

    Katrina Morgan

    PhD, University of North Carolina
    Gamelin Fellow,
    Fall 2019
    Microlocal Analysis
  • Kristin DeVleming

    Kristin DeVleming

    PhD, University of Washington
    Gamelin Fellow,
    Spring 2019
    Birational Geometry and Moduli Spaces
  • Annie Raymond

    Annie Raymond

    PhD, TU Berlin
    Gamelin Fellow,
    Fall 2017
    Geometric and Topological Combinatorics
  • Michael Cantrell

    Michael Cantrell

    PhD, University of Oxford
    Gamelin Fellow,
    Fall 2016
    Geometric Group Theory
  • Bobby Wilson

    Bobby Wilson

    PhD, University of Chicago
    Gamelin Fellow,
    Fall 2015
    New Challenges in PDE: Deterministic Dynamics and Randomness in High and Infinite Dimensional Systems
  • Han Li

    Han Li

    PhD, Yale University
    Gamelin Fellow,
    Spring 2015
    Geometric and Arithemtic Aspects of Homogeneous Dynamics

Huneke

Craig Huneke

Craig Huneke received his B.A. from Oberlin College in 1973 and his PhD from Yale University in 1978. Twenty years later he was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship at the Max Planck Institute in Bonn. Over the years, Dr. Huneke has earned international recognition for his work advancing the field of algebra. He co-invented “tight closure” with Melvin Hochster of the University of Michigan and is highly respected for his expertise in commutative algebra and algebraic geometry. He is also recognized for his talent as expositor of mathematics for a general audience as well as for the mathematically sophisticated. Dr. Huneke is also committed to mathematics education and hopes that the Huneke Postdoctoral Fellows will take some interest in issues in mathematics education.

In 2012, Dr. Huneke became the first Marvin Rosenblum Professor of Mathematics at the University of Virginia after serving as the Henry J. Bischoff Professor of Mathematics at the University of Kansas since 1999.

Huneke Fellows

  • Max Zimet

    Max Zimet

    PhD, Stanford University
    Huneke Fellow,
    Fall 2022
    Analytic and Geometric Aspects of Gauge Theory
  • Yan Mary He

    Yan Mary He

    PhD, University of Chicago
    Huneke Fellow,
    Spring 2022
    Complex Dynamics: From Special Families to Natural Generalizations in One and Several Variables
  • Yvon Verberne

    Yvon Verberne

    PhD, University of Toronto
    Huneke Fellow,
    Fall 2020
    Random and Arithmetic Structures in Topology
  • Cris Negron

    Cris Negron

    PhD, University of Washington
    Huneke Fellow,
    Spring 2020
    Quantum Symmetries
  • Rosa Vargas

    Rosa Maria Vargas

    PhD, IIMAS-Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico
    Huneke Fellow,
    Fall 2018
    Hamiltonian Systems, from Topology to Applications through Analysis
  • Anastasia Maria Chavez

    Anastasia Maria Chavez

    PhD, University of California, Berkeley
    Huneke Fellow,
    Fall 2017
    Geometric and Topological Combinatorics
  • Max Engelstein

    Max Engelstein

    PhD, University of Chicago
    Huneke Fellow,
    Spring 2017
    Harmonic Analysis
  • Andrea Mondino

    Andrea Mondino

    PhD, International School for Advanced Studies
    Huneke Fellow,
    Spring 2016
    Differential Geometry
  • Sara Maloni

    Sara Maloni

    PhD, University of Warwick
    Huneke Fellow,
    Spring 2015
    Dynamics on Moduli Spaces of Geometric Structures
  • Emanuel Indrei

    Emanuel Indrei

    PhD, University of Texas
    Huneke Fellow,
    Fall 2013
    Optimal Transport: Geometry and Dynamics
  • Claudiu Raicu

    Claudiu Raicu

    PhD, University of California, Berkeley
    Huneke Fellow,
    Spring 2013
    Commutative Algebra

McDuff

Dusa McDuff received her PhD from Cambridge University in 1971. She has been in the United States since 1978, first as an Assistant Professor at Stony Brook University. While at Stony Brook she served as Department Chair and Undergraduate Director, and she has been interested in educational issues at both the undergraduate and graduate levels, as well as being active in encouraging more women to study mathematics. Dr. McDuff joined the faculty at Barnard College in 2007.

Dr. McDuff has worked in symplectic topology since the early 1980s. She has written over 90 papers, as well as co-authored three books with Dietmar Salamon, most recently J-holomorphic curves and Symplectic Topology. McDuff has held visiting positions at the Institute for Advanced Study, UC Berkeley, MIT, Harvard and, at MSRI (twice) as a mathematician, in addition to serving on MSRI’s Scientific Advisory Committee (1990-98, Chair 1993-96). She has served on the MSRI Board of Trustees (1998-2002 and 2005-present) and she was elected Chair (1998-2001).

Dr. McDuff has been awarded numerous honors including the first Ruth Lyttle Satter Prize of the American Mathematical Society in 1991 and honorary doctorates from the University of Edinburgh (where she was a undergraduate) and the Universities of York and Strasbourg. She was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in London in 1994 and a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1995; she became a member of the United States National Academy of Sciences in 1999.

McDuff Fellows

  • Shaoyun Bai

    Shaoyun Bai

    PhD, Princeton University
    McDuff Fellow,
    Fall 2022
    Floer Homotopy Theory
  • Alexandre Krajenbrink

    Alexandre Krajenbrink

    PhD, École Normale Supérieure
    McDuff Fellow,
    Fall 2021
    Universality and Integrability in Random Matrix Theory and Interacting Particle Systems
  • Nicholas Miller

    Nicholas Miller

    PhD, Purdue University
    McDuff Fellow,
    Fall 2020
    Random and Arithmetic Structures in Topology
  • Dylan Allegretti

    Dylan Allegretti

    PhD, Yale University
    McDuff Fellow,
    Fall 2019
    Holomorphic Differentials in Mathematics and Physics
  • Joseph Waldron

    Joseph Waldron

    PhD, University of Cambridge
    McDuff Fellow,
    Spring 2019
    Birational Geometry and Moduli Spaces
  • Jørgen Vold Rennemo

    Dr. Jørgen Vold Rennemo

    PhD, Imperial College, London
    McDuff Fellow,
    Spring 2018
    Enumerative Geometry Beyond Numbers
  • David Hume

    David Hume

    PhD, University of Oxford
    McDuff Fellow,
    Fall 2016
    Geometric Group Theory

Strauch

Roger Strauch

Roger Strauch is Chairman of The Roda Group, a seed stage venture capital group, based in Berkeley, California. His firm, co-founded in 1997 with Dan Miller, provides entrepreneurs the resources, environment, and guidance to launch and grow their high technology businesses. The Roda Group was the largest investor in Solazyme, a renewable oil and bioproducts company and the leader in algal biotechnology.

In addition, Mr. Strauch is chairman of the board of directors of Cool Systems, the manufacturer of Game Ready, a medical physical therapy system. He was the first CEO and former chairman of Ask Jeeves (now Ask.com).

Mr. Strauch is also a member of the Engineering Dean’s College Advisory Boards of the University of California, Berkeley and Cornell University, and the recipient of the 2002 Wheeler Oak Meritorious Award from the University of California, Berkeley. In 2006, Mr. Strauch and his wife Dr. Julie Kulhanjian were named and honored as “Builders of Berkeley.”

Strauch Fellows

  • Yilin Wang

    Yilin Wang

    PhD, ETH Zürich
    Strauch Fellow,
    Spring 2022
    The Analysis and Geometry of Random Spaces
  • Martin Bobb

    Martin Bobb

    PhD, University of Texas, Austin
    Strauch Fellow,
    Fall 2020
    Random and Arithmetic Structures in Topology
  • David Reutter

    David Reutter

    PhD, University of Oxford
    Strauch Fellow,
    Spring 2020
    Quantum Symmetries / Higher Categories and Categorification (Joint Appointment)
  • Gabriel de Oliveira Martins

    Gabriel de Oliveira Martins

    PhD, University of California, Santa Cruz
    Strauch Fellow,
    Fall 2018
    Hamiltonian Systems, from Topology to Applications through Analysis
  • Shotaro Makisumi

    Shotaro Makisumi

    PhD, Stanford University
    Strauch Fellow,
    Spring 2018
    Group Representation Theory and Applications
  • Marina Iliopoulou

    Marina Iliopoulou

    PhD, University of California, Berkeley
    Strauch Fellow,
    Spring 2017
    Harmonic Analysis
  • Heather Macbeth

    Heather Macbeth

    PhD, Princeton University
    Strauch Fellow,
    Spring 2016
    Differential Geometry
  • Jasmin Matz

    Jasmin Matz

    PhD, Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf
    Strauch Fellow,
    Fall 2014
    New Geometric Methods in Number Theory and Automorphic Forms
  • Pierre Simon

    Pierre Simon

    PhD, Université de Paris XI
    Strauch Fellow,
    Spring 2014
    Model Theory, Arithmetic Geometry and Number Theory

Uhlenbeck

Karen Uhlenbeck

Karen Uhlenbeck served on the MSRI Board of Trustees from 1981-1990 and again from 2012-2016. She received her PhD from Brandeis University in 1968. Following appointments at MIT, the University of California at Berkeley, the University of Illinois and the University of Chicago, she has held since 1987 the Sid W. Richardson Foundations Regents Chair III in Mathematics at the University of Texas at Austin. From 2014-2017 she is a visiting professor at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. She also served as the vice president of the American Mathematical Society (1987-90).

Dr. Uhlenbeck is a highly distinguished mathematician specializing in differential geometry, nonlinear partial differential equations, and mathematical physics. At the same time, her efforts across the educational spectrum, especially her role as a founder of the Park City-IAS Mathematical Institute, have added vitality to the mathematical scene. Uhlenbeck’s mentoring, both formal (as co-founder of the Annual Women in Mathematics Program at the IAS) and informal, is legendary.

Dr. Uhlenbeck has been awarded a MacArthur “Genius” Fellowship, the Steele Prize of the American Mathematical Society, the Abel Prize of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, and the U.S. National Medal of Science. In 1990, she became the second woman (after Emmy Noether in 1932) to present a plenary lecture at an International Congress of Mathematics. She is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the U.S. National Academy of Sciences. Professor Uhlenbeck is the recipient of seven honorary degrees, most recently from Harvard, Princeton and Brandeis Universities.

Uhlenbeck Fellows

  • Chiara Franceschini

    Chiara Franceschini

    PhD, Università di Ferrara
    Uhlenbeck Fellow,
    Fall 2021
    Universality and Integrability in Random Matrix Theory and Interacting Particle Systems
  • Albert Ai

    Albert Ai

    PhD, University of California, Berkeley
    Uhlenbeck Fellow,
    Spring 2021
    Mathematical Problems in Fluid Dynamics
  • Xuwen Zhu

    Xuwen Zhu

    PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Uhlenbeck Fellow,
    Fall 2019
    Microlocal Analysis
  • Thomas McConville

    Thomas McConville

    PhD, University of Minnesota Twin Cities
    Uhlenbeck Fellow,
    2018-19
    Complementary Program
  • Dr. Robert Muth

    Robert Muth

    PhD, University of Oregon
    Uhlenbeck Fellow,
    Spring 2018
    Group Representation Theory and Applications
  • Naser Talebizadeh Sardari

    Naser Talebizadeh Sardari

    PhD, University of Chicago
    Uhlenbeck Fellow,
    Spring 2017
    Analytic Number Theory

Viterbi

Andrew Viterbi

Andrew Viterbi served on the MSRI Board of Trustees from April 2001 through February 2013. He is the co-inventor of Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) based digital cellular technology. In 2000, Dr. Viterbi retired from his position as vice chairman of the board of Qualcomm, a company he helped found in 1985. He had served as the company’s chief technical officer until 1996, when he became its vice chairman.

Before founding Qualcomm, Dr. Viterbi co-founded Linkabit Corporation, a digital communications company, in 1968. He is the inventor of the Viterbi Algorithm, a decoding algorithm used in most digital communication systems. Dr. Viterbi has spent some of his career in academia as professor in the Schools of Engineering at both UCLA and UC San Diego. Dr. Viterbi is now professor emeritus at UC San Diego.

Dr. Viterbi and his daughter, Dr. Audrey Viterbi, established The Viterbi Group in 2000. The company advises and invests in startup companies, predominantly in the wireless communications and network infrastructure fields. Dr. Viterbi is a member of the National Academy of Engineering, the National Academy of Sciences, and was a member of President Clinton’s Information Technology Advisory Committee. Andrew lives in the San Diego area.

Viterbi Fellows

  • Tony Feng

    Tony Feng

    PhD, Stanford University
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2023
    Algebraic Cycles, L-Values, and Euler Systems
  • Janne Junnila

    Melissa Zhang

    PhD, Boston College
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Fall 2022
    Floer Homotopy Theory
  • Janne Junnila

    Janne Junnila

    PhD, University of Helsinki
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2022
    The Analysis and Geometry of Random Spaces
  • Emma Bailey

    Emma Bailey

    PhD, University of Bristol
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Fall 2021
    Universality and Integrability in Random Matrix Theory and Interacting Particle Systems
  • Tommaso Cremaschi

    Tommaso Cremaschi

    PhD, Boston College
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Fall 2020
    Random and Arithmetic Structures in Topology
  • Philip Dittmann

    Philip Dittmann

    PhD, University of Oxford
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Fall 2020
    Decidability, Definability and Computability in Number Theory
  • Alexander Campbell

    Alexander Campbell

    PhD, Macquarie University
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2020
    Higher Categories and Categorification
  • Hui Zhu

    Hui Zhu

    PhD, Université de Paris XI
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Fall 2019
    Microlocal Analysis
  • Tina Kanstrup

    Tina Kanstrup

    PhD, Aarhus University
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2019
    Derived Algebraic Geometry
  • Joshua Burby

    Joshua Burby

    PhD, Princeton University
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Fall 2018
    Hamiltonian Systems, from Topology to Applications through Analysis
  • Yaim Cooper

    Yaim Cooper

    PhD, Princeton University
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2018
    Enumerative Geometry Beyond Numbers
  • Konstantin Tikhomirov

    Konstantin Tikhomirov

    PhD, University of Alberta
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Fall 2017
    Geometric Functional Analysis and Applications
  • Julia Brandes

    Julia Brandes

    PhD, University of Bristol
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2017
    Analytic Number Theory
  • Jenya Sapir

    Jenya (Eugenia) Sapir

    PhD, Stanford University
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Fall 2016
    Geometric Group Theory
  • Chengjian Yao

    Chengjian Yao

    PhD, State University of New York, Stony Brook
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2016
    Differential Geometry
  • Dana Mendelson

    Dana Mendelson

    PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Fall 2015
    New Challenges in PDE: Deterministic Dynamics and Randomness in High and Infinite Dimensional Systems
  • Guillaume Dreyer

    Guillaume Dreyer

    PhD, University of Southern California
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2015
    Dynamics on Moduli Spaces of Geometric Structures
  • Sam Gunningham

    Sam Gunningham

    PhD, Northwestern University
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Fall 2014
    Geometric Representation Theory
  • Vesna Stojanoska

    Vesna Stojanoska

    PhD, Northwestern University
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2014
    Algebraic Topology
  • Maria Chlouveraki

    Maria Chlouveraki

    PhD, Université de Paris VII (Denis Diderot)
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2013
    Noncommutative Algebraic Geometry and Representation Theory
  • Anna Sakovich

    Anna Sakovich

    PhD, Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Fall 2013
    Mathematical General Relativity
  • Fan Qin

    Fan Qin

    PhD, Université Paris Diderot
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Fall 2012
    Cluster Algebras
  • Shawn Drenning

    Shawn Drenning

    PhD, University of Chicago
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2012
    Random Spatial Processes
  • Irine Peng

    Irine Peng

    PhD, University of Chicago
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Fall 2011
    Quantitative Geometry
  • John Andersson

    John Andersson

    PhD, Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2011
    Free Boundary Problems, Theory and Applications
  • Brooke Feigon

    Brooke Feigon

    PhD, University of California, Los Angeles
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2011
    Arithmetic Statistics
  • Brooke Feigon

    Julia Elisenda Grigsby

    PhD, University of California, Berkeley
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2010
    Homology Theory of Knots & Links
  • Erwan Brugalle

    Erwan Brugalle

    PhD, École Polytechnique in Paris
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Fall 2009
    Tropical Geometry
  • Chenyang Xu

    Chenyang Xu

    PhD, Princeton University
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2009
    Algebraic Geometry
  • Tom Sanders

    Tom Sanders

    PhD, University of Cambridge
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Fall 2008
    Ergodic Theory and Additive Combinatorics
  • Lauren Williams

    Lauren Williams

    PhD, University of California, Berkeley
    Viterbi Fellow,
    Spring 2008
    Combinational Representation Theory