stringtranslate.com

Richard Weber (mathematician)

Richard Robert Weber (born 25 February 1953) is a mathematician working in operational research.[1][2] He is Emeritus Churchill Professor of Mathematics for Operational Research in the Statistical Laboratory, University of Cambridge.

Weber was educated at Walnut Hills High School, Solihull School and Downing College, Cambridge. He graduated in 1974, and completed his PhD in 1980 under the supervision of Peter Nash.[3] He has been on the faculty of the University of Cambridge since 1978, and a fellow of Queens' College since 1977 where he has been Vice President from 1996–2007 and again from 2018–2020. He was appointed Churchill Professor in 1994, and he becameEmeritus Churchill Professor on retirement in 2017. He was Director of the Statistical Laboratory from 1999 to 2009, and is a trustee of the Rollo Davidson Trust.[4]

He works on the mathematics of large complex systems subject to uncertainty. He has made contributions to stochastic scheduling, Markov decision processes, queueing theory, the probabilistic analysis of algorithms, the theory of communications pricing and control, and rendezvous search.

Weber and his co-authors were awarded the 2007 INFORMS prize for their paper on the online bin packing algorithm.[5]

Selected publications

References

  1. ^ "Who's Who". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. ^ "Richard Weber's homepage at Cambridge University".
  3. ^ Richard Weber at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  4. ^ "Trustees of the Rollo Davidson Trust". Archived from the original on 29 September 2008. Retrieved 24 April 2009.
  5. ^ "INFORMS Computing Society past prizewinners".