Bryan Shader
Encyclopedia
Bryan Shader is a professor of mathematics at the University of Wyoming. He received his Ph.D. from University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1990, his advisor was Professor Richard Brualdi. Bryan is the Editor-in-chief of Electronic Journal of Linear Algebra. He is also Associate Editor of other two journals Linear Algebra and its Applications(from 2003) and Linear & Multilinear Algebra(from 2009). Bryan is one of the most active mathematicians working on Combinatorial Matrix Theory. He is also noted for his monograph on Matrices of sign-solvable linear systems. Besides organizing many workshops he is a Co-PI of Math Teacher Leadership Program, an NSF project (2009–2014). Bryan is presently Special Assistant to the Vice-President of Research of University of Wyoming.
Bryan Shader received the 2005 Burton W. Jones Distinguished Teaching Award from the Rocky Mountain Section of the Mathematical Association of America
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Bryan Shader received the 2005 Burton W. Jones Distinguished Teaching Award from the Rocky Mountain Section of the Mathematical Association of America
Mathematical Association of America
The Mathematical Association of America is a professional society that focuses on mathematics accessible at the undergraduate level. Members include university, college, and high school teachers; graduate and undergraduate students; pure and applied mathematicians; computer scientists;...
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Books
- (With Richard Brualdi) Matrices of sign-solvable linear systems.Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics, 116, 1995
- (With Richard Brualdi) Graph and Matrices, Chapter 3 in Topics in Algebraic Graph Theory, Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications, 102, Cambridge University Press, 2005
- Bipartite Graph and Matrices, Chapter 30, Handbook of Linear Algebra, CRC Press, 2007
External links
- Bryan Shader at the Mathematics Genealogy ProjectMathematics Genealogy ProjectThe Mathematics Genealogy Project is a web-based database for the academic genealogy of mathematicians. As of September, 2010, it contained information on approximately 145,000 mathematical scientists who contribute to "research-level mathematics"...