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Candice Renee Price
American mathematician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Candice Renee Price is an African-American mathematician and co-founder of the website Mathematically Gifted & Black, which features the contributions of modern-day black mathematicians.[1] She is an advocate for women and people of color in STEM.[2]
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Research
Price's area of mathematical research is DNA topology.[3]
Career
Price obtained a bachelor's degree in mathematics from California State University, Chico in 2003, and a master's degree from San Francisco State University in 2007.[3] She earned her doctoral degree in mathematics from the University of Iowa in 2012, under the advisement of Isabel Darcy.[4]
She is currently an associate professor at Smith College.[3] She was previously an assistant professor at the University of San Diego[5] and at West Point (United States Military Academy).[6]
Price is one of the founding organizers of the Underrepresented Students in Topology and Algebra Research Symposium (USTARS), an annual multi-day symposium started in 2011 that features the research of algebra and topology graduate students, as well as providing career and professional development opportunities.[7]
In 2017, Price, along with Erica Graham, Raegan Higgins, and Shelby Wilson, started the website Mathematically Gifted & Black, which, coinciding with Black History Month, highlights the life and works of a modern-day Black mathematician every day in February.[1]
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Awards and honors
Price was a 2013 MAA Project NExT fellow.[8] For her work on Mathematically Gifted & Black, she was awarded the 2022 Presidential Recognition Award[9] of the Association for Women in Mathematics (AWM). She was a 2024 recipient of the Deborah and Franklin Haimo Award for Distinguished College or University Teaching of Mathematics.[10]
She co-delivered an invited plenary address at the 2021 National Math Festival.[11] She delivered a Mathematical Association of America (MAA) invited lecture at MathFest 2021.[12]
References
External links
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