Rosa OrellanaRosa C. Orellana is an American mathematician specializing in algebraic combinatorics and representation theory. She is a professor of mathematics at Dartmouth College.[1][2] Early life and educationOrellana's excitement for mathematics was recognized early, by one of her elementary school teachers.[3] She is a graduate of California State University, Los Angeles,[1] and was the first in her family to earn a college degree. Her undergraduate education also included summer research with Kenneth Millett at the University of California, Santa Barbara on knot theory and its applications to biomolecules.[3] She completed her Ph.D. in 1999 at the University of California, San Diego.[4] Originally intending to continue her study of knot theory, she shifted to algebraic combinatorics after the knot theorist she planned to work with went on leave.[3] Her dissertation, The Hecke Algebra of Type B at Roots of Unity, Markov Traces and Subfactors, was supervised by Hans Wenzl.[4] CareerAfter completing her doctorate, Orellana became a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California, San Diego, supported by a University of California President's Postdoctoral Fellowship,[2][5] before joining Dartmouth as a Wilson Foundation Fellow in 2000.[2][6] At Dartmouth, she won the John M. Manley Huntington Memorial Award for outstanding research by a newly tenured faculty member, helped found the Dartmouth chapter of the Association for Women in Mathematics,[2][6] and founded a sequence of Sonia Kovalevsky Math days to encourage local school girls to continue in mathematics.[6] She serves on the Scientific Advisory Board for the Institute for Computational and Experimental Research in Mathematics (ICERM).[7] Orellana was a former Council member at large for the American Mathematical Society (AMS) from 2020 to 2022.[8] References
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