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Jessie MacWilliams

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Name
  
Jessie MacWilliams

Role
  
Mathematician


Employer
  
Bell Labs

Awards
  
Noether Lecture

Jessie MacWilliams wwwawmmathorgnoetherbrochureGIFSMacWilliamsjpg

Born
  
January 4, 1917 (
1917-01-04
)
Stoke-on-Trent, England

Alma mater
  
University of Cambridge, BA, 1938, MA, 1939, Johns Hopkins University, Harvard University, PhD under Andrew Gleason

Occupation
  
Mathematician, programmer

Known for
  
The MacWilliams identities in coding theory

Notable work
  
The Theory of Error-Correcting Codes, with Neil Sloane

Children
  
Daughter Anne, two sons

Died
  
May 27, 1990, Morristown, New Jersey, United States

Books
  
The theory of error correcting codes, Introduction to Global Variational Geometry

Education
  
University of Cambridge, Harvard University

Florence Jessie MacWilliams (4 January 1917 – 27 May 1990) was an English mathematician who contributed to the field of coding theory. She was born in Stoke-on-Trent, England and studied at the University of Cambridge, receiving her BA in 1938 and her MA in the following year. She moved to the United States in 1939 and studied at Johns Hopkins University. One year later she left Johns Hopkins for Harvard University. In 1955 she became a programmer and learned coding theory at Bell Labs where she spent most of her career. Although she did major research at Bell Labs, she was denied a promotion to a mathematics research position until she received a Ph.D. She would proceed to fulfill some of the PhD's requirements while working at Bell Labs and taking care of her family, but she completed her PhD after returning to Harvard for one more year (1961–1962), under the supervision of Andrew Gleason. She and her daughter Anne were both studying mathematics at Harvard that year.

She worked on error-correcting codes and co-wrote The Theory of Error-Correcting Codes with Neil Sloane. "MacWilliams also worked on cyclic codes, generalizing them to abelian group codes. With H. B. Mann, she solved a difficult problem involving certain design matrices."

She is known for the MacWilliams identities in coding theory.

In 1980 she was the first Noether Lecturer.

Additional reading

  • Gallian, Joseph A. (2006). Contemporary Abstract Algebra (Sixth ed.). Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0-618-51471-6. 
  • References

    Jessie MacWilliams Wikipedia