Alison Beth Miller is an American mathematician who was the first American female gold medalist at the International Mathematical Olympiad. She also holds the distinction of placing in the top 16 of the Putnam Competition four times, the last three of which were recognized by the Elizabeth Lowell Putnam award for outstanding performance by a woman on the contest.[2]
In 2008, she became a co-winner of the Alice T. Schafer Prize for excellence in mathematics by an undergraduate woman from the Association for Women in Mathematics for her three undergraduate research papers.[8][11] That year she also received her B.A. degree with Highest Honors in Mathematics from Harvard University.[12] Her senior thesis, for which she won the Hoopes Prize,[13][14] was titled "Explicit Class Field Theory in Function Fields: Gross-Stark Units and Drinfeld Modules." She was then awarded a Churchill Scholarship to study for a year at the University of Cambridge in England.[7][12][15]
^Rimer, Sara (October 10, 2008), "Math Skills Suffer in U.S., Study Finds", The New York Times, Since [Melanie Wood in 1998], two female high school students, Alison Miller, from upstate New York, and Sherry Gong, whose parents emigrated to the United States from China, have made the United States team (they both won gold).
^Undergraduate Mathematics Colloquium aka Math Table, Harvard Mathematics Department, retrieved 2013-04-20, Dustin Clausen and Alison Miller were recipients of the Hoopes Prizes this year, for their outstanding senior theses.
^Gallian, Joseph A. (2022), "Snapshots of AWM's Alice T. Schafer prize winners", in Beery, Janet L.; Greenwald, Sarah J.; Kessel, Cathy (eds.), Fifty years of women in mathematics—reminiscences, history, and visions for the future of AWM, Association for Women in Mathematics Series, vol. 28, Cham: Springer, pp. 389–404, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-82658-1_35, ISBN978-3-030-82657-4, MR4454634; see "2008: Galyna Dobrovolska and Alison Miller", p. 399.