Nizioł earned an M.S. in computer science from the University of Warsaw in 1984. She was employed as an assistant professor at the University of Warsaw from 1984 to 1988.
After beginning doctoral studies in computer science at Stanford University under the supervision of Andrew Yao, she followed him to Princeton University, but she switched to mathematics,[1] and received her Ph.D. in 1991 from Princeton University under the supervision of Gerd Faltings.[2]
She moved to France in 2012 as a directrice de recherches at CNRS, first in École normale supérieure de Lyon and, since 2020 at Institut mathématique de Jussieu in Paris.
Mathematical work
She studies the cohomology of -adic varieties. Her contributions include:
Comparison theorems, via motivic methods, between de Rham and -adic étale cohomologies of algebraic varieties over -adic fields (proofs[5][6] of the conjectures and of Fontaine).
A definition[7][8] for -adic algebraic varieties, of a -adic analog (the syntomic cohomology) of the classical Deligne cohomology for algebraic varieties over the real numbers.
A comparison theorem,[9] via syntomic methods, for -adic analytic varieties, and the computation[10][11] of the -adic étale cohomology of various -adic symmetric spaces with applications to the -adic local Langlands correspondence.