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41px-face.jpg Maria Brumm has a Master's degree... in Science! She wrote her thesis on hydrogeolo tectohydr gehoo seismohydrololololol ground water in tectonically active settings, and is currently looking for work in the Seattle area. She has previous professional experience in hydrogeology and knows how to rock a GIS analysis; her resume is available here.

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« The Scouring of Fossil Gorge | Main | Happy Birthday, Lusi (the Drilling Totally Did It) »

Borrowing Geek Cred from the Mathematicians

Category: Science Culture
Posted on: May 28, 2008 8:58 AM, by Maria Brumm

Quick background: Paul Erdös was a prolific mathematician. If you co-authored a paper with him, you have an Erdös number of 1. If you co-author a paper with someone with an Erdös number of 1, you have an Erdös number of 2. It's like playing Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon if you're a gigantic dork.

Now that one of my papers has been officially accepted, I officially have an Erdös number of no greater than 6 - which fact I discovered using this handy-dandy search engine*. Though sadly, one of the papers that links me to Erdös is an obituary, not actual research.

As far as I can tell, this is not especially impressive, but I'm sort of pleased with it anyway.

I also discovered via the Mathematics Genealogy Project that my 10th-great-grand-advisor (to whatever extent an academic stillbirth counts as having ancestry) is Simeon Poisson.

Mathematicians have gone completely Web 2.0 with their intellectual connections. Is this evidence of a disciplinary obsession with pedigree? Or just a natural result of a decent database and an understandable geeky interest in social network topology?

*Handy-dandiness may vary with subfield. I'm actually quite curious whether Erdös numbers in the geosciences line up with the perceived mathiness of various subfields.

Comments

Congratulations! Of course we mathematicians did know our Erdos numbers way before internet became popular, only it was harder to compute them.
I guess we are so web 2.0 in some things to compensate our being 19th century in others. No, I don't mean 20th century - we still give talks with white chalk on very large slate blackboards whenever we can.

Posted by: estraven | May 30, 2008 9:10 AM

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