Office Hours
I graduated with my B.S. in Mathematics 1999 and Ph.D. in Mathematics in 2005, both degrees from the University of New Hampshire. My doctoral thesis was completed under the supervision of Liming Ge, and contributed to the field of von Neumann algebras.
Joining the Siena faculty as a fresh Ph.D. in 2005, I immediately began working with students on undergraduate research, and am proud to have supervised many undergraduate research projects that have resulted in publications with student authors and coauthors. Our work has led to invitations for me and my students to speak nationally and internationally, from Schenectady to Shanghai.
My teaching philosophy is centered on the idea that a mathematics instructor's main task is to carefully and unobtrusively arrange mathematical experiences that encourage each individual student's inquiry and careful investigation. I'm happy to have had the opportunity to craft and run courses that my students repeatedly affirm "are never just about the grade".
Degree | Program | University |
---|---|---|
Ph.D. | Mathematics | The University of New Hampshire |
B.S. | Mathematics | The University of New Hampshire |
My Siena Experience
My Teaching Philosophy
If it isn't in your head, you can't use it to think. I believe that students should work hard to conceptualize and internalize concepts so the concepts can be thought about fluently. If technology is to be used, it should be used to help in the construction of a sharp mental model that can be thought about without the technology at hand. I want to combat the unfortunate contemporary belief that we do not need to internalize ideas or information because of calculators or Google. In the classroom I aim to employ active learning methods that encourage constructive thought.
What I Love About Siena
My colleagues are some of the most dedicated and compassionate people I've ever had the opportunity to know. My students are respectful and try their best. These are my favorite things about Siena.
My Favorite Courses to Teach
I like to teach Modern Algebra and Real Analysis. In these courses, students get a taste of what it means to be a mathematician.
My Professional Experience
Year | Title | Organization |
---|---|---|
2017 - Now | Professor | Siena College |
2011 - Now | Associate Professor, Mathematics | Siena College |
2005 - 2011 | Assistant Professor, Mathematics | Siena College |
2004 - 2005 | Dissertation Fellow, Mathematics | The University of New Hampshire |
1998 - 2004 | Teaching assistant, Mathematics Instructor | The University of New Hampshire |
1995 - 1995 | Research assistant, Physics | The University of New Hampshire |
Articles & Book Reviews
- Noncommutative Joinings II
Journal is not in list - being petitioned
2021 - Full Factors and Co-Amenable Inclusions
Communications in Mathematical Physics
2019 - Noncommutative Joinings III
Operators and matrices
2019 - On Noncommutative Joinings
International Mathematical Research Notices
2017 - Impact of the Siena College Tech Valley Scholars Program on Student Outcomes
Journal of STEM Education
2016 - The Correlation Numerical Range and Trace-Positive Complex Polynomials
Operators and matrices
2016 - The Modular Symmetry of Markov Maps
Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications
2016 - A note on moments in finite von Neumann algebras
INVOLVE Journal
2011 - On the Spectrum of Banach Algebra-Valued Entire Functions
Illinois Journal of Mathematics
2011 - A Non-Residually Finite Hyperlinear One-Relator Group
Proc. Amer. Math. Soc
2010 - A Note on Non-Residually Solvable Hyperlinear One-Relator Groups
INVOLVE Journal
2010 - Some Remarks on Haagerup's Approximation Property
Journal of Operator Theory
2008 - A Folner Invariant for Type II_1 Factors
Expo. Math
2007 - Transitive Families of Projections in Factors of Type II_1
Proc. Amer. Math. Soc
2004
Presentations
- Full Factors and Co-Amenable Inclusions
2019
2019 British Mathematical Colloquium, Lancaster, England, United Kingdom - Full Factors and Co-Amenable Inclusions
2019
SUNY Albany Analysis and Data Science Seminar, Albany, New York - Full Factors and Co-Amenable Inclusions
2019
University of Copenhagen Operator Algebras Seminar, Copenhagen, Denmark - Correlation Numerical Range
2015
Data Science and Mathematics, Providence, Rhode Island - The correlation numerical range and trace-positive polynomials
2015
1114th Meeting of the AMS (California State University, Fullerton), Fullerton, California - The correlation numerical range and trace-positive polynomials
2015
Union College Mathematics Seminar, Schenectady, New York - Generic Weak Mixing and the Negation of Property (T)
June, 2014
Operator Algebras Seminar, Morningside Institute Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China-PRC - Joinings and Correspondences
June, 2014
Analysis Seminar, Morningside Institute, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China-PRC - The Kadison-Singer Problem
November, 2013
SUNY Albany, Albany, United States of America - Weak Mixing and the Negation of Property T
2013
University of Waterloo Operator Algebra Seminar, Waterloo, Canada-Ontario - Joinings and Correspondences
April, 2012
University of Virginia Operator Algebras and Operator Theory Seminar, Charlottesville, Virginia - A Panoply of Pigeonhole Principle Pranks with a Practical Application
2012
Siena Mathematics Colloquium, Loudonville, New York - Correspondences of Finite von Neumann Algebras and Joinings of Measurable Dynamical Systems
2012
International Conference on Operator Theory and Operator Algebras, Shanghai, China-PRC - Joinings and Correspondences
2012
University of Michigan at Dearborn Analysis Seminar, Dearborn, Michigan - Operator Algebras and Quantum Entanglement
2012
Siena Mathematics Colloquium, Loudonville, New York - Operator Algebras and Quantum Entanglement
2012
Vassar College Mathematics Colloquium, Poughkeepsie, New York - Operator algebras and Quantum Entanglement
2012
Skidmore College Mathematics Colloquium, Saratoga Springs, New York - Joinings and Correspondences
November, 2011
New Hampshire Operator Theory Symposium, Hanover, New Hampshire - Rigidity and Finite von Neumann Algebras
February, 2010
SUNY Albany, Albany, United States of America - Hyperlinearity and One-Relator Groups
2010
SUNY Albany, Albany, New York - On the Closability of Certain L2 Derivations
2009
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee - An introduction to free probability
October, 2008
SUNY Albany, Albany, United States of America - Correspondences and Haagerup's Approximation Property
2008
MAA Seaway, Unknown, Unknown - Correspondences and Haagerup's Approximation Property
2008
SUNY Albany, Albany, New York - Haagerup's Approximation Property and Relative Amenability
2008
2008 GPOTS at U. of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio - The Haagerup Property and Correspondences
2007
Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas - Folner Invariants for II_1 Factors
2006
2006 GPOTS (Great Plains Operator Theory Symposium) at the U. of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa - A Folner Invariant for II_1 Factors
2005
CRANTS (SUNY Albany), Albany, New York - Burnside Factors, Amenability Defects and Transitive Families of Projections in Factors of Type II_1
2005
Thesis Defense (UNH), Unknown, Unknown - Groups and Rubik's Cube
2005
Siena Mathematics Colloquium, Loudonville, New York - Transitive Families in Finite Factors
2005
Capital Region Algebra and Number Theory Seminar (CRANTS) SUNY Albany, Albany, New York - Burnside Factors
2004
UNH Math Seminar, Durham, New Hampshire - Transitive Families in Factors
2004
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee