Graduate Student Seminar: Kristin Lauter, Microsoft Research, Chat about internship and postdoc/researcher positions at Microsoft Research

Graduate Student Seminars
Nov 6, 2018
12:30 pm
Fine Hall 214

Title:  Chat about internship and postdoc/researcher positions at Microsoft Research 

Information: Microsoft Research is a roughly 25 year old basic research lab in computer science and related fields of mathematical sciences. Dr. Lauter (https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/people/klauter/) is a mathematician and a Principal Researcher and Research Manager at Microsoft, leading the Cryptography Research group.  She will give an overview of Microsoft Research and wants to help connect talented Princeton students to possible jobs at Microsoft and in industry.

Microsoft Research landing page with links to research areas and job opportunities:

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/

 

Kristin Estella Lauter is a mathematician and cryptographer whose research areas are number theory, algebraic geometry, and applications to cryptography. She is particularly known for her work on homomorphic encryption, elliptic curve cryptography, and for introducing supersingular isogeny graphs as a hard problem into cryptography. She is a Principal Researcher and Research Manager of the Cryptography Group at Microsoft Research in Redmond, Washington. She served as President of the Association for Women in Mathematics from 2015 –2017.  She has published more than 100 papers and holds more than 50 patents.

Lauter was awarded the Selfridge Prize in Computational Number Theory in 2008 and was elected to the 2015 Class of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society "for contributions to arithmetic geometry and cryptography as well as service to the community."  In 2017, she was selected as a fellow of the Association for Women in Mathematics in the inaugural class.  She is the 2018-2020 Polya Lecturer for the Mathematical Association of America.

Lauter received her BA, MS, and Ph.D degrees in mathematics from the University of Chicago, in 1990, 1991, and 1996, respectively. Prior to joining Microsoft, she held positions as a visiting scholar at Max Planck Institut fur Mathematik in Bonn, Germany (1997), T.H. Hildebrandt Research Assistant Professor at the University of Michigan (1996-1999), and a visiting researcher at Institut de Mathematiques Luminy in France (1999).

She is a co-founder of the Women in Numbers Network, a research collaboration community for women in number theory, and she is the lead PI for the AWM NSF Advance Grant (2015-2020) to create and sustain research networks for women in all areas of mathematics. She serves on the Board of Trustees of MSRI, the Advisory Board of the Banff International Research Station and has served on the Council[7] of the American Mathematical Society (2014-2017).