<<

JMM 2020

2020 Joint Mathematics Meetings Colorado Convention Center, Denver, CO January 15–18, 2020

Section Contents

JMM 2020 Announcement...... p. 1553 JMM 2020 Program Timetable...... p. 1574 AMS Short Course...... p. 1589 AMS Employment Center...... p. 1592 JMM 2020 Registration Forms...... p. 1595

Please note: The times listed herein were current as of press time. For the most up to date JMM 2020 scheduling information, please see: http://jointmathematicsmeetings.org/meetings /national/jmm2020/2245_timetable.html.

1552 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020 Denver, CO Colorado Convention Center and Hyatt Regency at Colorado Convention Center

January 15–18, 2020 sessions contributed by the Society for Industrial and Applied Wednesday–Saturday Mathematics (SIAM). AMS Associate Secretary: Michel Lapidus Meeting #1154 MAA Associate Secretary: Tensia Soto Joint Mathematics Meetings, including the 126th Annual Announcement issue of Notices: October 2019 Meeting of the AMS, 103rd Annual Meeting of the Mathe- Program first available on AMS website: To be announced matical Association of America (MAA), annual meetings of the Association for Women in Mathematics (AWM) and the Deadlines National Association of (NAM), and the win- For organizers: Expired ter meeting of the Association of Symbolic Logic (ASL), with For abstracts: September 17, 2019

The scientific information listed below may be dated. For the latest information, see https://www.ams.org/meetings /national.html. Joint Invited Addresses Skip Garibaldi, Institute For Defense Analyses Center for Communications Research, La Jolla, Uncovering lottery she- nanigans? (AMS-MAA Invited Address); Friday, 11:10 am. Karen Lange, Wellesley College, Different problems, common threads: Computing the difficulty of mathematical problems (AMS-MAA Invited Address); Wednesday, 11:10 am. Rajiv Maheswaran, Second Spectrum, The fantastic intersection of math and sports: Where no one is afraid of a decimal point (MAA-AMS-SIAM Gerald and Judith Porter Public Lecture); Saturday, 3:00 pm. Birgit Speh, Cornell University, Branching laws for representations of non compact orthogonal groups (AWM-AMS ); Thursday, 10:05 am. Joint Prize Session In order to showcase the achievements of recipients of the various prizes, the AMS and MAA are cosponsoring this event at 4:25 pm on Thursday. All participants are invited to attend. See a full description of the prizes on the JMM website. 126th Meeting of the AMS AMS Invited Addresses Bonnie Berger, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Davis, Biomedical data sharing and analysis at scale; Friday, 10:05 am. , University of California San Diego, Mathematical frameworks for signal and image analysis. Lecture 1: Multiresolution analysis, and beyond (AMS Colloquium Lectures: Lecture I); Wednesday, 1:00 pm. Ingrid Daubechies, University of California San Diego, Mathematical frameworks for signal and image analysis. Lecture 2: Diffusion methods in manifold and fibre bundle learning (AMS Colloquium Lectures: Lecture II); Thursday, 1:00 pm. Ingrid Daubechies, University of California San Diego, Mathematical frameworks for signal and image analysis. Lecture 3: Adaptive time-frequency methods (AMS Colloquium Lectures: Lecture III); Friday, 1:00 pm. Gregory W. Moore, Rutgers, The State University of , Smooth invariants of four-dimensional manifolds and quantum field theory; Saturday, 9:00 am. Nancy Reid, University of Toronto, Statistical theory and practice (AMS Josiah Willard Gibbs Lecture); Wednesday, 8:30 pm. Kenneth A. Ribet, University of California, Berkeley, A 2020 view of Fermat’s Last Theorem (AMS Retiring Presidential Address); Thursday, 3:20 pm. Tatiana Toro, University of Washington, Differential operators and the geometry of domains in Euclidean space (AMS Lecture); Thursday, 2:15 pm. Anthony Várilly-Alvarado, Rice University, The geometric disposition of Diophantine equations; Wednesday, 10:05 am.

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1553 JMM 2020

AMS Special Sessions If you are volunteering to speak in a Special Session, you should send your abstract as early as possible via the abstract submission form found at www.jointmathematicsmeetings.org/meetings/abstracts/abstract.pl?type=jmm. Some sessions are cosponsored with other organizations. These are noted within the parentheses at the end of each listing, where applicable. Advances in Multivariable Operator Theory: Connections with Algebraic Geometry, Free Analysis, and Free Probability (Code: SS 114A), Joseph A. Ball, Virginia Tech, and Paul S. Muhly, University of Iowa. Advances in Operator Algebras (Code: SS 72A), Ian Charlesworth, University of California, Berkeley, Brent Nelson, Vanderbilt University, Sarah Reznikoff, Kansas State University, and Lauren Ruth, Vanderbilt University. Algebraic Cycles in Arithmetic and Geometry (Code: SS 103A), Jeff Achter, Colorado State University, and Sebastian Casalaina-Martin, University of Colorado Boulder. Algebras and Algorithms (Code: SS 56A), Keith A. Kearnes, Peter Mayr, and Agnes Szendrei, University of Colorado, Boulder. Algorithms, Analysis, and Applications of Numerical PDEs (Code: SS 98A), Xiaoming He, Missouri University of Science and Technology, and Jiangguo (James) Liu, Colorado State University. Algorithms, Experimentation, and Applications in Number Theory (Code: SS 94A), Beth Malmskog, Colorado College, and Christopher Rasmussen, Wesleyan University. Analysis and Differential Equations at Undergraduate Institutions (Code: SS 9A), William Green, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, and Katharine Ott, Bates College. Analysis of Nonlocal Models (Code: SS 88A), Giacomo Capodaglio, Florida State University, Marta D’Elia, Center for Computing Research, Sandia National Laboratories, and Max Gunzburger, Florida State University. Analytic Theory of Automorphic Forms and L-Functions (Code: SS 95A), Amanda Folsom, Amherst College, Michael Griffin, Brigham Young University, Larry Rolen, Vanderbilt University, and Jesse Thorner, University of Florida. Analytic and Probabilistic Combinatorics (Code: SS 10A), Miklós Bóna, University of Florida, and Jay Pantone, Marquette University. Applications and Computations in Knot Theory (Code: SS 55A), Harrison Chapman, Colorado State University, Heather A. Dye, McKendree University, and Jesse S.F. Levitt, University of Southern California. Applied Topology (Code: SS 29A), Henry Adams, Colorado State University, and Mikael Vejdemo-Johansson, CUNY College of Staten Island. Arithmetic Dynamics (Associated with AMS Retiring Presidential Address Kenneth A. Ribet) (Code: SS 5A), Rafe Jones, Car- leton College, Nicole R. Looper, Cambridge University and Brown University, and Joseph H. Silverman, Brown University. Arithmetic Galois Actions (Code: SS 39A), Ozlem Ejder, Colorado State University, Jamie Juul, University of British Columbia, and Rachel Pries, Colorado State University. Aspects and Applications of Algebraic Combinatorics (Code: SS 82A), William J. Martin, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, and Jason Williford, University of Wyoming. C*-Algebras, Dynamical Systems and Applications (Code: SS 26A), Robin Deeley, University of Colorado Boulder, and Zhuang Niu and Ping Zhong, University of Wyoming. Choiceless Set Theory and Related Areas (Code: SS 16A), Paul Larson, Miami University, and Jindrich Zapletal, University of Florida (AMS-ASL). Coding Theory and Applications (Code: SS 8A), Allison Beemer, Arizona State University, Ian F. Blake, University of British Columbia, Christine A. Kelley, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and Felice Manganiello, Clemson University. Cohomological Field Theories and Wall Crossing (Code: SS 108A), Yefeng Shen, University of Oregon, and Mark Shoe- maker, Colorado State University. Combinatorial Structures and Integrable Systems (Code: SS 83A), Maxim Arnold and Nathan Williams, University of Texas at Dallas. Commutative Algebra (Code: SS 36A), Patricia Klein, University of Kentucky, and Haydee Lindo, Williams College. Computational Biomedicine (Code: SS 53A), Nek Valous and Niels Halama, National Center for Tumor Diseases Hei- delberg, German Cancer Research Center. Computational and Categorical Methods in Homotopy Theory (Code: SS 14A), Agnes Beaudry, University of Colorado Boulder, and Julie Bergner, University of Virginia. Current Areas of Interest in the Mathematical Sciences of Medieval Islam (Code: SS 24A), Emelie A. Kenney and Moham- mad Javaheri, Siena College. Differential Geometry and Global Analysis, Honoring the Memory of Tadashi Nagano (1930–2017) (Code: SS 69A), Bang- Yen Chen, Michigan State University, Nicholas D. Brubaker and Thomas Murphy, California State University, Fullerton,

1554 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020

Takashi Sakai, Tokyo Metropolitan University, Makiko Sumi Tanaka, Tokyo University of Sciences, Bogdan D. Suceava, California State University, Fullerton, and Mihaela B. Vajiac, Chapman University. Differential and Difference Equations in Biological Dynamics (Code: SS 18A), Xiang-Sheng Wang and Aijun Zhang, University of Louisiana at Lafayette. Evolution (Code: SS 27A), Chris McCarthy and Johannes Familton, Borough of Manhattan Community College CUNY. Experimental and Computer Assisted Mathematics (Code: SS 80A), Shashank Kanade, University of Denver, Matthew Russell, Rutgers University, and Ali Kemal Uncu, Research Institute for Symbolic Computation, Johannes Kepler Uni- versity Linz. Explicit Methods in Arithmetic Geometry in Characteristic p ​(a Mathematics Research Communities Session) (Code: SS 113A), Vaidehee Thatte, Binghamton University, Sarah Arpin, University of Colorado Boulder, and Nicholas Triantafillou, University of Georgia. Extremal and Probabilistic Combinatorics (Code: SS 89A), Sean English, Ryerson University, Emily Heath, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and Michael Tait, Carnegie Mellon University. Fractal Geometry, Dynamical Systems, and Applications (Code: SS 43A), Andrea Arauza Rivera, California State University, East Bay, Robert Niemeyer, Metropolitan State University, and John Rock, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. Frames, Designs, and Optimal Spherical Configurations (Code: SS 58A), Xuemei Chen, New Mexico State University, Alexey Glazyrin, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, Kasso Okoudjou, University of Maryland, College Park, and Oleksandr Vlasiuk, Florida State University. From STEM to STEAMS (Science, Technology, Engineering, AI, Mathematics, Statistics) (Code: SS 52A), Charles Chen, Applied Materials, and Mason Chen, Stanford OHS. Future Directions in Theory & Applications of Nonlinear Reaction-Diffusion Equations (Code: SS 51A), Jerome Goddard, II, Auburn University at Montgomery, Nsoki Mavinga, Swarthmore College, and Quinn Morris, Appalachian State University. Geometric Representation Theory and Equivariant Elliptic Cohomology (a Mathematics Research Communities Session) (Code: SS 111A), Anne Dranowski, University of Toronto, Noah Arbesfeld, Imperial College London, and Dominic Culver, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Geometry of Differential Equations (Code: SS 21A), Jeanne Clelland and Yuhao Hu, University of Colorado Boulder, and George Wilkens, University of Hawai’i. Getting Started in Undergraduate Research: Topics, Tools and Open Problems (Code: SS 34A), Hannah Highlander, Uni- versity of Portland, Pamela E. Harris, Williams College, Erik Insko, Florida Gulf Coast University, and Aaron Wootton, University of Portland (AMS-MAA). Group Actions in Harmonic Analysis (Code: SS 84A), Keri Kornelson, University of Oklahoma, and Emily J. King, Uni- versity of Bremen. Groups and Topological Dynamics (Code: SS 91A), Constantine Medynets, United States Naval Acadmey, Volodymyr Nekrashevych, Texas A&M University, and Dmytro Savchuk, University of South Florida. Hamiltonian Systems (Code: SS 76A), Sean Gasiorek, University of California Santa Cruz, Gabriel Martins, University of California Berkeley, and Andres Perico, University of California Santa Cruz. Harmonic Analysis (Code: SS 99A), Taryn C. Flock, Macalester College, and Betsy Stovall, University of Wisconsin– Madison. Highly Accurate and Structure-Preserving Numerical Methods for Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations (Code: SS 57A), Qin Sheng, Baylor University, Jorge E. Macias-Diaz, Universidad Autonoma de Aguascalientes, and Joshua L. Padgett, Texas Tech University. History of Mathematics (Code: SS 20A), Jemma Lorenat, Pitzer College, Sloan Despeaux, Western Carolina University, Daniel Otero, Xavier University, and Adrian Rice, Randolph-Macon College (AMS-MAA). How to Discover and Train Gifted Students (Code: SS 68A), Scott Annin, California State University, Fullerton, Cezar Lupu, Texas Tech University, Shoo Seto, University of California, Irvine, and Bogdan D. Suceava, California State Uni- versity, Fullerton. If You Build It They Will Come: Presentations by Scholars in the National Alliance for Doctoral Studies in the Mathematical Sciences (Code: SS 107A), David Goldberg, Purdue University, and Phil Kutzko, University of Iowa. Interactions Among Partitions, Basic Hypergeometric Series, and Modular Forms (Code: SS 17A), Chris Jennings-Shaffer, University of Denver, and Frank Garvan, University of Florida. Interactions between Combinatorics, Representation Theory, and Coding Theory (Code: SS 75A), Manabu Hagiwara, Chiba University, and Richard Green, University of Colorado Boulder. Interactions of Inverse Problems, Computational Harmonic Analysis, and Imaging (Code: SS 48A), M. Zuhair Nashed, Uni- versity of Central Florida, Willi Freeden, University of Kaiserslautern, and Otmar Scherzer, University of Vienna.

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1555 JMM 2020

Interfaces Between PDEs and Geometric Measure Theory (Associated with AMS Maryam Mirzakhani Invited Address Tatiana Toro) (Code: SS 42A), Robin Neumayer and Zihui Zhao, Institute for Advanced Study. International Research Experience for Students (IRES) (Code: SS 61A), Asuman G. Aksoy, Claremont McKenna College, and Zair Ibragimov, California State University, Fullerton. Iterative Methods for Large-Scale Data Analysis (Code: SS 33A), Jamie Haddock, University of California Los Angeles, and Anna Ma, University of California San Diego. Logic Facing Outward (Associated with Joint AMS-MAA Invited Address Karen Lange) (Code: SS 77A), Karen Lange, Wellesley College, and Russell Miller, Queens College & Graduate Center CUNY (AMS-ASL). Markov Models and Matrix Properties (Code: SS 109A), Alan Krinik and Randall J. Swift, California Polytechnic Pomona. Mathematical Analysis in Data Science (Associated with AMS Colloquium Lectures Ingrid Daubechies) (Code: SS 110A), Radu Balan, University of Maryland, Tingran Gao, University of Chicago, Sinan Gunturk, New York University, and Ozgur Yilmaz, University of British Columbia. Mathematical Aspects of Conformal Field Theory (Code: SS 66A), Shashank Kanade and Andrew Linshaw, University of Denver, and Robert McRae, Vanderbilt University. Mathematical Information in the Digital Age of Science (Code: SS 78A), Patrick Ion, IMKT & University of Michigan, Olaf Teschke, zbMath, and Stephen Watt, University of Waterloo. Mathematical Physics Some Open Problems for the 21st Century (Code: SS 45A), Michael Maroun. Mathematical Programming and Combinatorial Optimization (Code: SS 23A), Steffen Borgwardt, University of Colorado Denver, and Tamon Stephen, Simon Fraser University. Mathematical and Computational Research in Data Science (Code: SS 44A), Linda Ness, DIMACS, Rutgers University, and F. Patricia Medina, Yeshiva University (AMS-AWM). Mathematics and Motherhood (Code: SS 81A), Della Dumbaugh, University of Richmond, Carrie Diaz Eaton, Bates College, and Emille Lawrence, University of San Francisco. Matrices and Graphs (Code: SS 62A), Leslie Hogben, Iowa State University and American Institute of Mathematics, and Bryan L. Shader, University of Wyoming. Mean Field Games: Theory and Applications (Code: SS 97A), François Delarue, University of Nice Sophia Antipolis. Modeling Natural Resources (Code: SS 25A), Shandelle M. Henson, Andrews University, and Julie Blackwood, Williams College. Noncommutative Geometry and Applications (Code: SS 28A), Frederic Latremoliere, University of Denver. Novel Teaching Practices in Mathematics (Code: SS 49A), David Weisbart, University of California, Riverside. Outreach Strategies for Reaching Underrepresented Students at the Pre-College Level (Code: SS 101A), Jacob Castaneda, The Art of Problem Solving/Bridge to Enter Advanced Mathematics (BEAM), Cory Colbert, Washington & Lee University, Li-Mei Lim, Boston University/PROMYS, Max Warshauer, Texas State University at San Marcos, and Daniel Zaharopol, The Art of Problem Solving/Bridge to Enter Advanced Mathematics (BEAM). Partition Theory and q-Series (Code: SS 70A), Madeline Locus Dawsey, The University of Texas at Tyler, Marie Jameson, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and James Sellers, Pennsylvania State University. Pedagogical Innovations That Lead to Successful Mathematics (Code: SS 12A), Michael A. Radin, Rochester Institute of Technology, Natali Hritonenko, Prairie View A&M University, and Ellina Grigorieva, Texas Women’s University. Quantization for Probability Distributions and Dynamical Systems (Code: SS 41A), Mrinal Kanti Roychowdhury, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. Quantum Theory of Matter Meets Noncommutative Geometry and Topology (Code: SS 59A), Masoud Khalkhali, University of Western Ontario, and Markus Pflaum, University of Colorado, Boulder. Random Combinatorial Structures, Complex Analysis and Integrable Systems (Code: SS 93A), Virgil U. Pierce, University of Northern Colorado, and Nicholas M. Ercolani, University of Arizona. Random Matrices and Integrable Systems (Code: SS 47A), Ken McLaughlin, Colorado State University, and Sean O’Ro- urke, University of Colorado Boulder. Rational Points on Algebraic Varieties: Theory and Computation (Associated with AMS Invited Address Anthony Varilly-Al- varado) (Code: SS 100A), Brendan Hassett, Brown/ICERM, Andrew Sutherland, MIT, and Anthony Varilly-Alvardo, Rice University. Recent Advances in Function and Operator Theory (Code: SS 1A), Kelly Bickel, Bucknell University, Alberto Condori, Florida Gulf Coast University, William Ross, University of Richmond, and Alan Sola, Stockholm University. Recent Advances in Time-Stepping Methods for Ocean Modeling (Code: SS 79A), Sara Calandrini, Konstantin Pieper, and Max Gunzburger, Florida State University.

1556 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020

Recent Advances of Mathematical Modeling on Ecology and Epidemiology (Code: SS 50A), Xi Huo, University of Miami, and Rongsong Liu, University of Wyoming. Recent Developments in Numerical Methods for PDEs (Code: SS 73A), Valeria Barra, University of Colorado Boulder, and Oana Marin, Argonne National Laboratory. Recent Trends in Semigroup Theory (Code: SS 104A), Michael Kinyon, University of Denver, and Ben Steinberg, City College of New York. Representation Theory Inspired by the Langlands Conjectures (Associated with Joint AWM-AMS Noether Lecture Birgit Speh) (Code: SS 54A), Birgit Speh, Cornell University, and Peter Trapa, University of Utah (AMS-AWM). Representations of Finite Groups and Related Structures (Code: SS 32A), Mandi Schaeffer Fry, Metropolitan State University of Denver, and Nat Thiem, University of Colorado Boulder. Research from the Rocky Mountain-Great Plains Graduate Research Workshop in Combinatorics (Code: SS 102A), Steve But- ler, Iowa State University, Michael Ferrara, University of Colorado Denver, Jeremy Martin, University of Kansas, Tyrrell McAllister, University of Wyoming, and Jamie Radcliffe, University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Research in Graph Theory and Combinatorics by Research Experience for Undergraduate Faculty (REUF) Alumni and Their Students (Code: SS 92A), Katie Anders and Kassie Archer, University of Texas at Tyler, and Briana Foster-Greenwood, California State Polytechnic University-Pomona. Research in Mathematics by Early Career Graduate Students (Code: SS 40A), Marat Markin, Morgan Rodgers, and Khang Tran, California State University Fresno. Research in Mathematics by Undergraduates and Students in Post-Baccalaureate Programs (Code: SS 13A), Darren A. Narayan, Rochester Institute of Technology, Khang Tran, California State University Fresno, Mark David Ward, Purdue University, and John Wierman, The Johns Hopkins University (AMS-MAA-SIAM). Riemannian Foliations and Applications (Code: SS 15A), Igor Prokhorenkov and Ken Richardson, Texas Christian University. Self-Distributive Structures, Knot Theory, and the Yang-Baxter Equation (Code: SS 85A), Mohamed Elhamdadi, University of South Florida, Petr Vojtechovsky, University of Denver, and David Stanovsky, Charles University in Prague. Sequences, Words, and Automata (Code: SS 67A), Eric Rowland and Manon Stipulanti, Hofstra University. Set-Valued and Fuzzy-Valued Analysis with Applications (Code: SS 71A), Vira Babenko, Drake University. Singularities and Characteristic Classes (Code: SS 65A), Paolo Aluffi, Florida State University, and Leonardo Mihalcea, Virginia Tech. Spectral and Transport Properties of Disordered Systems (Code: SS 37A), Peter D. Hislop, University of Kentucky, and Jeffrey Schenker, Michigan State University. Stochastic Analysis and Applications in Finance, Actuarial Science and Related Fields (Code: SS 2A), Julius N. Esunge, University of Mary Washington, See Keong Lee, Universiti Sains Malaysia, and Aurel I. Stan, The Ohio State University. Stochastic Differential Equations and Application of Mathematical Biology (Code: SS 74A), Jianjun Paul Tian, New Mex- ico State University, Hai-Dang Nguyen, University of Alabama, Xianyi Zeng, University of Texas at El Paso, and Robert Smits, New Mexico State University. Stochastic Spatial Models (a Mathematics Research Communities Session) (Code: SS 112A), Tobias Johnson, College of Staten Island, Erin Beckman, , and Katelynn Kochalski, SUNY Geneseo. Symbolic Dynamics (Code: SS 38A), Ronnie Pavlov, University of Denver, and Scott Schmieding, Northwestern Uni- versity. The Geometry of Complex Polynomials and Rational Functions (Code: SS 3A), Trevor Richards, Monmouth College, and Malik Younsi, University of Hawai’i. The Kaczmarz Algorithm with Applications in Harmonic Analysis and Data Science (Code: SS 115A), Xuemei Chen, New Mexico State University, Palle E.T. Jorgensen, University of Iowa, and Eric Weber, Iowa State University. The Mathematics of Social Justice (Code: SS 90A), Andrea Arauza Rivera, California State University, East Bay, Paige Helms, University of Washington, Ryan Moruzzi, Ithaca College, and Robin Wilson, California Poly Pomona. Topological Measures of Complexity: Inverse Limits, Entropy, and Structure of Attractors (Code: SS 31A), Lori Alvin, Furman University, Jan P. Boronski, National Supercomputing Centre IT4innovations, Joanna Furno, University of Houston, and Piotr Oprocha, AGH University of Science and Technology. Utilizing Mathematical Models to Understand Tumor Heterogeneity and Drug Resistance (Code: SS 46A), James Greene, Clarkson University, Hwayeon Ryu, Elon University, and Kamila Larripa, Humboldt State University. Vietoris-Borsuk-Rips Homotopy (Code: SS 60A), Danuta Kolodziejczyk, Warsaw University of Technology, and Krystyna Kuperberg, Auburn University.

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1557 JMM 2020

Wall to Wall Modeling Activities in Differential Equations Courses (Code: SS 7A), Janet Fierson, La Salle University, Theresa Shelton, Southwestern University, and Brian Winkel, SIMIODE. Women in Mathematical Biology (Code: SS 105A), Christina Edholm, University of Tennessee, Amanda Laubmeier, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Katharine Gurski, Howard University, and Heather Zinn Brooks, University of California Los Angeles (AMS-AWM). Women in Symplectic and Contact Geometry II (Code: SS 35A), Morgan Weiler, Rice University, Catherine Cannizzo, Simons Center for Geometry and Physics, and Melissa Zhang, University of Georgia (AMS-AWM). Women in Topology (Code: SS 96A), Jocelyn Bell, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Rochy Flint, Columbia University Teachers College, Candice Price, Smith College, and Arunima Ray, Max Planck Institute for Mathematics (AMS-AWM). Sessions for Contributed Papers There will be sessions of ten-minute contributed talks. Although an individual may present only one contributed paper at a meeting, any combination of joint authorship may be accepted, provided no individual speaks more than once on the program. Contributed papers will be grouped together by related subject classifications into sessions. Submission of Abstracts for AMS Sessions Authors must submit abstracts of talks through www.jointmathematicsmeetings.org/meetings/abstracts /abstract.pl?type=jmm. Indicate the number of authors for the paper, click on the “New Abstract” button, and you will be taken to the submission form. Simply follow the step-by-step instructions (read them carefully) until you receive your unique abstract receipt number. No submission is complete until you are given this number. The deadline for all submissions is September 17, 2019. Late papers cannot be accommodated. Please email [email protected] if you have questions. If you make an inquiry about your specific abstract, please include your abstract receipt number. Other AMS Sessions Please see complete descriptions of these sessions on the JMM website. MAA-SIAM-AMS Hrabowski-Gates-Tapia-McBay Session, organized by Carrie Diaz Eaton, Bates College; Wednesday, 9:00–10:20 am. This year the session will consist of a lecture from 9:00–9:50 am given by Belin Tsinnajinnie, Santa Fe Community College, title to be announced, and a short panel discussion, title to be announced, from 9:50–10:20 am. Panelists will include Emille Davie Lawrence, University of San Francisco, Belin Tsinnajinnie, Santa Fe Community College, and William Yslas Vélez, University of Arizona. AMS Panel Discussion: Mental Health in the Mathematics Profession, organized by Justin Curry, SUNY Albany, and Mikael Vejdemo-Johansson, CUNY College of Staten Island/CUNY Graduate Center; Wednesday, 2:15–3:45 pm. The moderator for this discussion is Helen Grundman, Bryn Mawr College. The panelists include Justin Curry, SUNY Albany, Adriana Salerno, Bates College, Christopher Tralie, Ursinus College, and Mikael Vejdemo-Johansson, CUNY College of Staten Island/CUNY Graduate Center. AMS Committee on the Profession Panel Discussion: Mathematics and Ethics, Wednesday, 4:30–6:00 pm. The moderator for this discussion is Gigliola Staffilani, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The panelists include Catherine Buell, Fitchburg State University, Michael Harris, Columbia University, Dagan Karp, Harvey Mudd College, and , Brown University and President of the AMS. This panel is sponsored by the AMS Committee on the Profession. AMS-MAA Panel Discussion on Looking for teaching oriented positions: A panel for graduate students and postdocs, or- ganized by John Boller, University of Chicago, Alissa Crans, Loyola Marymount, Solomon Friedberg, Boston College, Tom Roby, University of Connecticut, and Michael Weingart, Rutgers University; Thursday, 9:00–10:30 am. Moderator for this panel will be Tom Roby, University of Connecticut. Panelists are Jennifer Beineke, Western New England Uni- versity, and Michael Weingart, Rutgers University. This panel is cosponsored by the AMS-MAA Joint Committee on TAs and Part-time Instructors and by MAA Project NExT. AMS-MAA Panel Discussion on Preparing your graduate students for teaching oriented positions: A panel for PhD granting departments and faculty, organized by John Boller, University of Chicago, Alissa Crans, Loyola Marymount, Solomon Friedberg, Boston College, Tom Roby, University of Connecticut, and Michael Weing- art, Rutgers University; Thursday, 10:30 am–12:00 pm. Moderator for this panel will be Solomon Friedberg, Boston College. Panelists are Jennifer Beineke, Western New England University, and Michael Weingart, Rutgers University. This panel is cosponsored by the AMS-MAA Joint Committee on TAs and Part-time Instructors and by MAA Project NExT. AMS Committee on Education Panel Discussion: Next Steps: Mathematics Departments and the Explosive Growth of Computational and Quantitative Offerings in Higher Education, organized by Katherine Kinnaird, Smith College and Katherine Stevenson, California State University, Northridge; Thursday, 1:00–2:30 pm.

1558 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020

Grad School Fair, Friday, 8:30–10:30 am. Here is the opportunity for undergrads to meet representatives from mathe- matical sciences graduate programs from universities all over the country. Cosponsored by the AMS and MAA. Current Events Bulletin, organized by David Eisenbud, Mathematical Sciences Research Institute; Friday, 1:00–5:00 pm. AMS Committee on Science Policy Panel Discussion: A Call to Action – Grassroots Advocacy for Our Profession, organized by Francis Su, Harvey Mudd College, Michael Vogelius, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, and Suzanne Weekes, Worcester Polytechnic Institute; Friday, 2:30–4:00 pm. A Town Hall with the AMS Executive Director about the Future of the Joint Mathematics Meetings, organized by Dan Margalit, Georgia Institute of Technology, and Irina Mitrea, Temple University; Friday, 3:00–4:00 pm. This event is spon- sored by the AMS Committee on Meetings and Conferences (COMC). Congressional Fellowship Session, organized by Karen Saxe, American Mathematical Society; Friday, 4:30– 6:30 pm. Lucia Simonelli, AMS Congressional Fellow 2019–20, will speak at this session. Application deadline for 2020–21 AMS Congressional Fellowship is February 15, 2020. Who Wants to Be a Championship, organized by Michael A. Breen, American Mathematical Society, and William T. Butterworth, DePaul University; Saturday, 1:00–2:45 pm. Other AMS Events Council, Tuesday, 1:30 pm Business Meeting, Saturday, 11:45 am AMS Short Course on Mean Field Games: Agent Based Models to Nash Equilibria This two-day course will take place on the Monday and Tuesday before the meeting actually begins. It is organized by François Delarue, University of Nice Sophia Antipolis. Presenters include: François Delarue, University of Nice Sophia Antipolis. Co-author with René Carmona of a two-volume book on the probabilistic approach to mean field games Christy Graves, . Working on applications of and numerical methods for mean field games Daniel Lacker, Columbia University. Author of a series of papers in the field, including several on the connection between finite-player games and mean field games Mathieu Laurière, Princeton University. Developed several numerical methods and code for mean field games Roland Malhamé, École Polytechnique de Montréal. One of the founders of the field who has been working recently on applications to engineering Kavita Ramanan, Brown University. Working recently on applications of major concepts of probability theory, such as the Central Limit Theorem or large deviations principle, to mean field games Ronnie Sircar, Princeton University. Working on the applications of mean field games to economics and finance.

There are separate registration fees to participate in this course. Please see the complete Short Course announcement on page 1589 of this issue, or go to https://www.ams.org/short-course. Department Chairs Workshop This annual one-day workshop for department chairs and leaders will be held on Tuesday, 8:00 am–6:30 pm, the day before the JMM actually begins, and will be led by Luca Capogna, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Kevin Knudson, University of Florida, Gloria Marí-Beffa, University of Wisconsin–Madison, and Jennifer Zhao, University of Michigan-Dearborn. What makes a chair different from any other engaged faculty member in the department? This workshop will examine the chair’s role in leading a department. The day will be structured to include and encourage networking and sharing of ideas amongst participants. There will be four sessions: 1. Modernizing Mathematics and Mathematicians 2. Evaluating Teaching 3. Difficult Conversations 4. The “entrepreneurial” mathematics department There is a separate registration and fee to participate. Register at https://www.ams.org/chairsworkshop2020. For further information, please contact the AMS Office of Government Relations at 401-455-4116 or [email protected].

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1559 JMM 2020 103rd Meeting of the MAA MAA Invited Addresses Scott Adamson, Chandler-Gilbert Community College, Mazes, riddles, zombies, and unicorns!; Wednesday, 2:15 pm. Della Dumbaugh, University of Richmond, Prospering through mathematics; Thursday, 9:00 am. Mohamed Omar, Harvey Mudd College, The art and craft of problem design; Wednesday, 3:20 pm. aBa Mbirika, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Two research projects birthed from curiosity, recreation, and joy; Saturday, 10:05 am. Vilma Mesa, University of Michigan, Instruction and resources in post-secondary mathematics: How their interplay shapes what we do in the classroom; Friday, 9:00 am. Ami Radunskaya, Pomona College, On the scales of one to infinity: Learning to listen to your mathematics (MAA Lecture for Students); Friday, 1:00 pm. Federico Ardila, San Francisco State University, Todxs Cuentan: Difference, humanity, and belonging in the mathematics classroom (MAA Project NExT Lecture on Teaching and Learning); Thursday, 11:10 am. Presentations by MAA Teaching Award Recipients Friday, 2:30–3:45 pm, organized by MAA President Michael Dorff, Brigham Young University, and MAA Secretary James Sellers, University of Minnesota Duluth. Winners of the Deborah and Franklin Tepper Haimo Awards for Distinguished College or University Teaching will give presentations on the secrets of their success. MAA Invited Paper Sessions Please see complete descriptions of these sessions on the JMM website. Creating Spaces for Mathematics, organized by Della Dumbaugh, University of Richmond; Wednesday, 8:00–11:00 am. Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education: Highlights from the Annual SIGMAA on RUME Conference, orga- nized by Megan Wawro, Virginia Tech, and Shiv Smith Karunakaran, Michigan State University; Wednesday, 2:15–4:35 pm. This session is sponsored by the SIGMAA on RUME. Trends in Mathematical and Computational Biology, organized by Timothy Comar, Benedictine University, Hannah Highlander, University of Portland, Bori Mazzag, Humboldt State University, and Raina Robeva, Randolph-Macon College; Thursday, 8:00–10:50 am. This session is sponsored by BIOSIGMAA. The Mathematics of the COMAP Modeling Contests, organized by Amanda Beecher, Interdisciplinary Contest in Mod- eling, Ramapo College of New Jersey, and Michelle Isenhour, Naval Postgraduate School; Thursday, 1:00–3:50 pm. Can Mathematics Help Us Trust Our Elections Again?, organized by Jonathon Hodge, Grand Valley State University, and Audrey Malagon, Virginia Wesleyan University; Friday, 8:00–10:20 am. This session is sponsored by Verified Voting. Experiencing Geometric Transformations and Evaluating Learning Progressions: Celebrating the Work of David W. Hen- derson, organized by Gregory Budzban, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville; Friday, 1:00–3:50 pm. Modernizing the Introductory Statistics Course, organized by Lisa Carnell, High Point University, and Alana Unfried, California State University, Monterey Bay; Saturday, 8:00–10:50 am. MAA Minicourses MAA Minicourses are open only to persons who register for the Joint Meetings and pay the Joint Meetings registration fee in addition to the appropriate minicourse fee. The MAA reserves the right to cancel any minicourse that is undersubscribed. Participants should read the descriptions of each minicourse thoroughly as some require participants to bring their own laptops and special software; laptops will not be provided in any minicourse. The enrollment in each minicourse is limited to 50; the cost is US$100. Please see complete descriptions of these minicourses on the JMM website. Minicourse #1. Using Automated Software to Learn and Teach Numerical Solution of Partial Differential Equa- tions, presented by L. Ridgway Scott, University of Chicago; Part A, Wednesday, 9:00–11:00 am, and Part B, Friday, 9:00–11:00 am. Minicourse #2. Teaching Reproducible Statistics with R and R Studio, presented by Ryan Botts, Point Loma Nazarene University, and Judith E. Canner, California State University, Monterey Bay; Part A, Wednesday, 9:00–11:00 am, and Part B, Friday, 9:00–11:00 am. This course is sponsored by the SIGMAA on Statistics Education (SIGMAA STAT ED). Minicourse #3. Creating and Adapting OER Textbooks Using the LibreTexts Platform, presented by Judy Dean and Paul E. Seeburger, Monroe Community College; Part A, Wednesday, 9:00–11:00 am, and Part B, Friday, 9:00–11:00 am.

1560 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020

Minicourse #4. Visualizing Multivariable Calculus & Differential Equations Using CalcPlot3D, presented by Paul E. Seeburger, Monroe Community College, and Monica VanDieren, Robert Morris University; Part A, Wednesday, 2:15–4:15 pm, and Part B, Friday, 1:00–3:00 pm. This course is sponsored by Web SIGMAA. Minicourse #5. Visual Complex Analysis- GeoGebra Tools and Mapping Diagrams, presented by Martin Flashman, Humboldt State University; Part A, Wednesday, 2:15–4:15 pm, and Part B, Friday, 1:00–3:00 pm. Minicourse #6. IBL SIGMAA Minicourse: Introduction to Inquiry-Based Learning, presented by Susan Crook, Loras College, and Carl Mummert, Marshall University; Part A, Thursday, 9:00–11:00 am, and Part B, Saturday, 9:00–11:00 am. This course is sponsored by IBL SIGMAA. Minicourse #7. A Short Road to the Modern Theory of Integration, presented by Jonathan Lewin, Kennesaw State Uni- versity; Part A, Thursday, 9:00–11:00 am, and Part B, Saturday, 9:00–11:00 am. Minicourse #8. Stats for Data Science, presented by Daniel Kaplan, Macalester College; Part A, Thursday, 1:00–3:00 pm, and Part B, Saturday, 1:00–3:00 pm. This course is sponsored by SIGMAA on Stat Ed. Minicourse #9. Combining Mathematical and Computational Thinking in a General Education Math Course, presented by Michelle Friend, Betty Love, Michael Matthews, and Victor Winter, University of Nebraska Omaha; Part A, Wednesday, 1:00–3:00 pm, and Part B, Friday, 1:00–3:00 pm. Minicourse #10. Wall to Wall Modeling Scenarios for Differential Equations, presented by Kurt Bryan, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, Rosemary Farley, Manhattan College, Patrice Tiffany, Manhattan College, Brian J. Winkel, SIMIODE, and Dina Yagodich, Frederick Community College; Part A, Thursday, 9:00–11:00 am, and Part B, Saturday, 9:00–11:00 am. MAA Contributed Papers The MAA Committee on Sessions of Contributed Papers solicits papers pertinent to the sessions listed below. Any paper that fits the subject of one of the themed sessions should be submitted directly to that session. All others should be submitted to the general sessions, which will accept abstracts in all areas of collegiate mathematics, mathematical peda- gogy, and the undergraduate mathematics curriculum. Each participant may make at most one presentation in an MAA Contributed Paper Session, either a presentation in one of the themed sessions or a presentation in one of the general sessions (exclusive or). If a paper cannot be accommodated in the themed session for which it was submitted, it will automatically be considered for the general contributed paper sessions. Presentations in the themed sessions are normally 15 minutes in length while presentations in the general sessions are limited to 10 minutes each. The session rooms are equipped with computer projectors and screens. Please note that the dates and times scheduled for these sessions remain tentative. Abstracts may be submitted electronically at www.jointmathematicsmeetings.org/meetings/abstracts /abstract.pl?type=jmm. Simply fill in the number of authors, click “New Abstract,” and then follow the step-by-step instructions. The organizer(s) of your session will automatically receive a copy of the abstract, so it is not necessary for you to send it directly to the organizer. Questions concerning the submission of abstracts should be addressed to abs-coord@ ams.org. The deadline for submission of abstracts is Tuesday, September 17, 2019. MAA Contributed Paper Sessions with Themes Abstract Algebra: Teaching, Topics, and Techniques, organized by Jessie Lenarz, St. Catherine University, and Kristi Meyer, Wisconsin Lutheran College; Thursday, 1:00–4:15 pm. Active Learning in Introductory Courses: Insights from Math Departments in the Process of Change, organized by Chris Rasmussen, San Diego State University, Wendy Smith, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and Matthew Voigt, San Diego State University; Saturday, 8:00–11:55 am. Cosponsored by IBL SIGMAA and the SIGMAA on RUME. Best Practices and Considerations in Designing and Developing Online Math Courses, organized by Sharon M. Mosgrove, Western Governors University, and Doug Scheib, Western Governors University; Wednesday, 8:00–10:55 am. Combining Technological Tools and Innovative Practices to Improve Student Learning Outcomes, organized by Marianna Bonanome, New York City College of Technology, Manmohan Kaur, Benedictine University, Ariane M. Masuda, New York City College of Technology, and K. Andrew Parker, New York City College of Technology; Friday, 8:00–10:55 am. Sponsored by MAA’s Committee on Technologies in Mathematics Education (CTME). Data Across the Curriculum, organized by Alana Unfried, California State University, Monterey Bay; Friday, 8:00–10:55 am. Cosponsored by the SIGMAA on Statistics Education and the Committee on the Undergraduate Program in Math- ematics.

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1561 JMM 2020

Developments, Directions, and Experiences in Open Educational Resources, organized by Benjamin Atchison, Framingham State University, Robert Beezer, University of Puget Sound, and Oscar Levin, University of Northern Colorado; Thursday, 8:00–11:55 am and 1:15–4:15 pm. Sponsored by MAA’s Committee on Technologies in Mathematics Education. Discrete Mathematics in the Undergraduate Curriculum - Ideas and Innovations in Teaching, organized by John Caugh- man, Portland State University, Oscar Levin, University of Northern Colorado, and Elise Lockwood, Oregon State Uni- versity; Wednesday, 8:00–11:00 am and 2:15–5:55 pm. The EDGE (Enhancing Diversity in Graduate Education) program: Pure and Applied talks by Women Math Warriors, organized by Laurel Ohm, University of Minnesota, and Shanise Walker, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire; Thursday, 1:00–4:15 pm. Effective Assessment Practices in Large-enrollment Classes or Non-traditional Classrooms, organized by Beste Gucler, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, Gulden Karakok, University of Northern Colorado, Jessica OShaughnessy, Shenandoah University, Jana Talley, Jackson State University, and Michael Tallman, Oklahoma State University; Saturday, 8:00–11:55 am. Fostering Creativity in Undergraduate Mathematics Courses, organized by Emily Cilli-Turner, University of La Verne, Houssein El Turkey, University of New Haven, Gulden Karakok, University of Northern Colorado, Milos Savic, University of Oklahoma, and Gail Tang, University of La Verne; Friday, 8:00–10:55 am and 1:00–4:55 pm. A History of Mathematics in the United States and Canada: A session in Honor of Math Historian David Zitarelli, or- ganized by Colin McKinney, Wabash College, and Amy Shell-Gellasch, Eastern Michigan University; Friday, 8:00–10:55 am. Sponsored by HOM SIGMAA. Inclusive Excellence for the Mathematical Sciences, organized by Naiomi Cameron, Lewis & Clark College, Rachelle DeCoste, Wheaton College, Chris Goff, University of the Pacific, and Semra Kilic-Bahi, Colby-Sawyer College; Saturday, 8:00–11:55 am. Organized by MAA Committee on the Participation of Women in Mathematics and Joint Committee on Women in Mathematical Sciences. Incorporating Realistic Applications of Mathematics Through Interdisciplinary Collaborations, organized by Mary Beisie- gel, Oregon State University, Suzanne Doree, Augsburg University, Mary R. Parker, University of Texas Austin, and Re- becca Segal, Virginia Commonwealth University; Thursday, 8:00–11:55 am. Sponsored by Math Across the Disciplines subcommittee of CUPM. Innovations in Complex Analysis, organized by Mike Brilleslyper, United States Air Force Academy, Russell W. Howell, Westmont College, and Beth Schaubroeck, United States Air Force Academy; Thursday, 1:00–4:15 pm. Innovative and Effective Ways to Teach Linear Algebra, organized by Sepideh Stewart, University of Oklahoma, Gil Strang, MIT, David Strong, Pepperdine University, and Megan Wawro,Virginia Tech; Friday, 1:00–4:55 pm. Inquiry-Based Learning and Teaching, organized by Brian Katz, Augustana College, Carl Mummert, Marshall University, and Victor I. Piercey, Ferris State University; Wednesday, 8:00–10:55 am and 2:15–5:55 pm. Sponsored by IBL SIGMAA. Integrating Research into the Undergraduate Classroom, organized by Timothy B. Flowers, Indiana University of Penn- sylvania, and Shannon R. Lockard, Bridgewater State University; Wednesday, 2:15–5:55 pm. Making Business Calculus Relevant, organized by Britney Hopkins, University of Central Oklahoma, and Leslie Jones, University of Tampa; Friday, 8:00–10:55 am. Mathematical Experiences and Projects in Business, Industry, and Government (BIG), organized by Robert Burks, Naval Postgraduate School; Thursday, 8:00–11:55 am. Sponsored by the SIGMAA on Business, Industry, and Government. Mathematical Knowledge of Teachers as an Integrated Application in Core Mathematics Courses, organized by Elizabeth Arnold, James Madison University, Wesley Calvert, Southern Illinois University, Elizabeth Fulton, Montana State Uni- versity, Yvonne Lai, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and April Strom, Chandler/Gilbert Community College; Saturday, 8:00–11:55am. Sponsored by MAA COMET and SIGMAA-MKT. Mathematics and the Arts: in the Classroom and Beyond, organized by Douglas Norton, Villanova University; Wednes- day, 8:00–11:00 am and 2:15–6:00 pm. Sponsored by SIGMAA Arts. Mathematics and the Life Sciences: Initiatives, Programs, Curricula, organized by Timothy D. Comar, Benedictine Uni- versity, Carrie Diaz Eaton, Bates College, and Raina Robeva, Sweet Briar College; Saturday, 8:00–11:55 am. Sponsored by BIO SIGMAA. Mathematics and Sports, organized by Diana Cheng, Towson University, and John David, Virginia Military Institute; Friday, 8:00–10:55 am and 1:00–4:55 pm. Sponsored by the Sports SIGMAA. Modeling-First Inquiry-Based Course Activities, organized by Ben Galluzzo, Clarkson University, and Brian Winkel, SIMIODE; Wednesday, 8:00–10:55 am. Quantitative Literacy and Social Justice: An Ongoing Dialogue, organized by Mark A. Branson, Stevenson University, Catherine Crockett, Point Loma University, Jason Douma, University of Sioux Falls, Gizem Karaali, Pomona College,

1562 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020

Victor Piercey, Ferris State University, and Samuel L. Tunstall, Trinity University; Friday, 8:00–10:55 am. Sponsored by SIGMAA-QL and MAA Subcommittee on Mathematics Across the Disciplines (MAD). Recreational Mathematics: Puzzles, Card Tricks, Games, and Gambling, organized by Paul R. Coe, Dominican University, David A. Nash, Le Moyne College, Andrew Niedermaier, Jane Street Capital, and Sara B. Quinn, Dominican University; Thursday, 8:00–11:55 am and 1:00–4:15 pm. Sponsored by the SIGMAA on Math Rec. Re-Envisioning the Calculus Sequence, organized by Robin Cruz, College of Idaho, Tom Halverson, Macalester College, Joel Kilty, Centre College, Alison Marr, Southwestern University, Alex M. McAllister, Centre College, and Chad Topaz, Williams College; Thursday, 8:00–11:55 am. Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education (RUME), organized by Nicole Engelke Infante, West Virginia Uni- versity, Shiv Smith Karunakaran, Michigan State University, and Megan Wawro, Virginia Tech; Thursday, 8:00–11:55 am and 1:00–4:15 pm. Sponsored by SIGMAA RUME. Role of Explanation in Mathematical Proofs, organized by Jeff Buechner, Rutgers University Newark, Sally Cockburn, Hamilton College, and Kevin Iga, Pepperdine University; Saturday, 8:00–11:55 am. Sponsored by POM SIGMAA. The Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Collegiate Mathematics, organized by Tom Banchoff, Brown University, Curtis Bennett, California State University Long Beach, Jacqueline Dewar, Loyola Marymount University, Edwin Her- man, University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, and Lew Ludwig, Denison University; Wednesday, 8:00–10:55 am and 2:15–5:55 pm. Scholarship on Teaching and Learning Statistics, organized by Lisa Carnell, High Point University; Friday, 1:00–4:55 pm. Sponsored by the SIGMAA on Statistics Education and the SIGMAA on Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education. Tangents to Math Circles, organized by Amanda K. Serenevy, Riverbend Community Math Center, and James Taylor, Math Circles Collaborative of New Mexico; Wednesday, 2:15–5:55 pm. Sponsored by SIGMAA MCST. The Teaching and Learning of Undergraduate Ordinary Differential Equations, organized by Christopher S. Goodrich, Creighton Preparatory School, and Beverly H. West, Cornell University; Saturday, 8:00–11:55 am. Sponsored by CODEE. Teaching Mathematics with Humor or Pop Culture, organized by Sarah J. Greenwald, Appalachian State University, Semra Kilic-Bahi, Colby-Sawyer College, and Cesar Martínez-Garza, Pennsylvania State University at Berks; Wednesday, 8:00–10:55 am. Tell Me a Story: Connections between Mathematics and Performed or Print Narrative, organized by Kristin Camenga, Juniata College, Judith Covington, Northwestern State University of Louisiana, and Sharon K. Robbert, Trinity Christian College; Thursday, 8:00–11:55 am. Sponsored by MAA Committee on Professional Development and MAA Committee on Two-Year Colleges. General Contributed Paper Sessions, organized by Holley Friendlander, Dickinson College, Cathy Erbes, Hiram College, and Steven McKay, Brigham Young University; Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, mornings and afternoons. These sessions accept contributions in all areas of mathematics, curriculum, and pedagogy. When you submit your abstract, you will be asked to classify it according to the following scheme: Assessment; History or Philosophy of Mathematics; Interdisciplinary Topics in Mathematics; Mathematics and Technology; Mentoring; Modeling and Applications; Outreach; Teaching and Learning Developmental Mathematics; Teaching and Learning Introductory Mathematics; Teaching and Learning Calculus; Teaching and Learning Advanced Mathematics; Algebra; Analysis; Applied Mathematics; Geometry; Graph Theory; Linear Algebra; Logic and Foundations; Number Theory; Probability and Statistics; Topology; and Other Topics. See also the AMS-MAA-SIAM Special Session on Research in Mathematics by Undergraduates and Students in Post-Bac- calaureate Programs, organized by Darren A. Narayan, Rochester Institute of Technology, Khang Tran, California State University, Fresno, Mark David Ward, Purdue University, and John Wierman, The Johns Hopkins University; the AMS- MAA Special Session on Getting Started in Undergraduate Research: Topics, Tools and Open Problems, organized by Hannah Highlander, University of Portland, Pamela E. Harris, Williams College, Erik Insko, Florida Gulf Coast University, and Aaron Wootton, University of Portland; and AMS-MAA Special Session on History of Mathematics, organized by Jemma Lorenat, Pitzer College, Sloan Despeaux, Western Carolina University, Daniel Otero, Xavier University, and Adrian Rice, Randolph-Macon College. MAA Panels Please see complete descriptions of these sessions on the JMM website. MAA Panel: Assessment for Accreditation: Lots of Little Fish Make a Large School, organized by Regina Aragon, Eastern New Mexico University, and Mariah Birgen, Wartburg College; Wednesday, 9:00–10:20 am. Panelists are Curtis Bennett, California State University, Long Beach, Bonnie Gold, Monmouth University, Stephanie Kolitsch, The University of

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1563 JMM 2020

Tennessee at Martin, Josephine Rodriguez, Western New England University, and Murphy Waggoner, Simpson College. This event is sponsored by the MAA Assessment Committee. MAA Panel: What Every Student Should Know about the JMM, organized by Peri Shereen, California State University, Monterey Bay, and Violeta Vasilevska, Utah Valley University; Wednesday, 9:00–10:20 am. Panelists are Joyati Debnath, Winona State University, Matt DeLong, Marian University, and Frank Morgan, Williams College. This panel is sponsored by the MAA Committee for Undergraduate Students. MAA Panel: Leveraging Social Media for the Greater Good of Mathematics, organized by Quinn A. Morris, Appalachian State University; Wednesday, 2:15–3:35 pm. Panelists are Madeline Alvis, Mathematical Association of America, Tai-Danae Bradley, The Graduate Center, CUNY, Anna Haensch, Duquesne University, Piper H., University of Hawai’i at Maˉnoa, and Dave Richeson, Dickinson College. MAA Panel: Strategies for Mid-Career Faculty, organized by Erin Martin, William Jewell College, and Azadeh Rafizadeh, William Jewell College; Wednesday, 2:15–3:35 pm. Panelists are Erica Flapan, Pomona College/AMS, Michel Lapidus, University of California, Riverside/AMS, P. Gavin LaRose, University of Michigan, and T. Chris Stevens, St. Louis Uni- versity/AMS. MAA Panel: MAA Session for Chairs Topic: Equity, Diversity, Inclusion in the Mathematics Classroom, organized by Linda Braddy, Tarrant County College Northeast Campus, and Catherine Murphy, Purdue University Northwest; Thurs- day, 9:00–10:20 am. Panelists are Minerva Cordero, University of Texas at Arlington, Ricardo Cortez, Tulane University, Sandra Rucker, Clark Atlanta University, and Monica Y. Stephens, Spelman College. MAA Panel: So You Want to Start an Undergraduate Statistics or Data Science Program?, organized by Lisa Carnell, High Point University, and Alana Unfried, California State University, Monterey Bay; Thursday, 9:00–10:20 am. Panelists are Judith Canner, California State University, Monterey Bay, Albert Kim, Smith College, Kimberly Roth, Juniata College, and Christopher Malone, Winona State University. This panel is sponsored by the SIGMAA on Statistics Education. AMS-MAA Panel Discussion on Looking for Teaching Oriented Positions: A Panel for Graduate Students and Postdocs, organized by John Boller, University of Chicago, Alissa Crans, Loyola Marymount, Solomon Friedberg, Boston College, Tom Roby, University of Connecticut, and Michael Weingart, Rutgers University; Thursday, 9:00–10:30 am. Moderator for this panel will be Tom Roby, University of Connecticut. Panelists are Jennifer Beineke, Western New England Uni- versity, and Michael Weingart, Rutgers University. This panel is cosponsored by the AMS-MAA Joint Committee on TAs and Part-time Instructors and by MAA Project NExT. AMS-MAA Panel Discussion on Preparing your Graduate Students for Teaching Oriented Positions: A Panel for PhD Granting Departments and Faculty, organized by John Boller, University of Chicago, Alissa Crans, Loyola Marymount, Solomon Friedberg, Boston College, Tom Roby, University of Connecticut, and Michael Weing- art, Rutgers University; Thursday, 10:30 am–12:00 pm. Moderator for this panel will be Solomon Friedberg, Boston College. Panelists are Jennifer Beineke, Western New England University, and Michael Weingart, Rutgers University. This panel is cosponsored by the AMS-MAA Joint Committee on TAs and Part-time Instructors and by MAA Project NExT. MAA Panel: International Engagement in Research and Education in Mathematical Sciences in Africa, organized by Overtoun Jenda, Auburn University; Thursday, 1:00–2:20 pm. Panelists are Peter Johnson, Auburn University, Suzanne Lenhart, University of Tennessee, and Padmanabhan Seshaiyer, George Mason University. MAA Panel: So You’re (Going to Be) a Postdoc: Now What? A Panel Discussion on a Fulfilling Postdoc Experience, organized by Francesca Bernardi, Florida State University, Harrison Bray, University of Michigan, and Patricia Klein, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities; Thursday, 1:00–2:20 pm. Panelists are Tarik Aougab, Haverford College, Hunter Brooks, Moat Analytics, Pamela Harris, Williams College, Yulan Qing, University of Toronto, and Nancy Rodriguez, University of Colorado, Boulder. MAA Panel: How to Write Op-eds for Newspapers: Shaping Public Thinking on Math, organized by Kira Hamman, Pennsylvania State Mont Alto, and Francis Su, Harvey Mudd College; Thursday, 2:35–3:55 pm. Panelists are Rafe Jones, Carleton College, Audrey Malagon, Virginia Wesleyan University, and Aaron Montgomery, Baldwin-Wallace University. This panel is sponsored by the MAA Science Policy Committee. MAA Panel: Strengthening Undergraduate Research Through Community Building, organized by Vicky Klima, Appa- lachian State University, and Thomas Wakefield, Youngstown State University; Thursday, 2:35–3:55 pm. Panelists are Michael Dorff, Brigham Young University, Tamás Forgács, Fresno State University, Kathryn Leonard, Occidental College, Charles Toll, US Department of Defense, and Ulrica Wilson, Morehouse College. This panel is sponsored by the MAA Subcommittee on Research by Undergraduates. MAA Panel: 2020 Vision for Actuarial Science Education, organized by Kevin Charlwood, Washburn University, Mi- chelle Guan, Indiana University Northwest, Steve Paris, Florida State University, Barry Smith, Lebanon Valley College,

1564 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020 and Sue Staples, Texas Christian University; Friday, 5:00–7:00 pm. Panelists are Stuart Klugman, Society of Actuaries, and Ken Williams, Casualty Actuary Society. This panel is sponsored by the MAA Actuarial Science Education Committee. MAA Panel: Supporting Transgender and Non-binary Students, organized by Juliette Bruce, University of Wisconsin, Christopher Goff, University of the Pacific, and Greg McCarthy, Hampshire College; Saturday, 9:00–10:20 am. Panelists are Juliette Bruce, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Randy Dominick, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Maxie Lahn, University of Michigan, and Terry Mullen, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Sponsored by Spectra, the asso- ciation of LGBTQ+ mathematicians. MAA Poster and Other Sessions Please see complete descriptions of these sessions on the JMM website. MAA-SIAM-AMS Hrabowski-Gates-Tapia-McBay Session, organized by Carrie Diaz Eaton, Bates College; Wednesday, 9:00–10:20 am. This year the session will consist of a lecture from 9:00–9:50 am given by Belin Tsinnajinnie, Santa Fe Community College, title to be announced, and a short panel discussion, title to be announced, from 9:50–10:20 am. Panelists will include Emille Davie Lawrence, University of San Francisco, Belin Tsinnajinnie, Santa Fe Community College, and William Yslas Vélez, University of Arizona. The Dolciani Award Lectures, organized by Tina Straley, Mathematical Association of America; Wednesday, 2:15–2:45 pm. Presentation by the Mary P. Dolciani Award winner for 2019, Professor Joseph Gallian. Relatively Prime Live: Truthiness in the Mathematical Domain, organized by Samuel Hansen, University of Michigan and ACMEScience.com; Wednesday, 3:00–3:55 pm. Estimathon!, organized by Andy Niedermaier, Jane Street Capital; Thursday, 10:00 am–12:00 pm. This event is spon- sored by Jane Street Capital and the MAA Committee on Undergraduate Students (CUS). MAA Student Poster Session, organized by Chasen Smith, Georgia Southern University, and Eric Ruggieri, College of the Holy Cross; Friday, 4:30–6:00 pm. This session features research done by undergraduate students. Participants should submit abstracts describing their research in 250 words or less by midnight on Friday, October 4, 2019. Notification of acceptance or rejection will be sent in early November. See www.maa.org/programs/students/undergraduate -research/jmm-student-poster-session for further information on what should be included in the abstract and a link to the abstract submission form. Questions regarding this session should be directed to Eric Ruggieri, eruggier@ holycross.edu, and Chasen Smith, [email protected]. This session is sponsored by the MAA Committee on Undergraduate Students (CUS). Mathematically Bent Theater, featuring Colin Adams and the Mobiusbandaid Players; Friday, 6:00–7:00 pm. Backgammon!, organized by Arthur Benjamin, Harvey Mudd College; Friday, 8:00–10:00 pm. Town Hall Meeting: Swap Session for Teaching Aligned with the Instructional Practices Guide, organized by Chris Oeh- rlein, Oklahoma City Community College, and Carolyn Yackel, Mercer University; Saturday, 8:00–9:20 am. This town hall meeting is sponsored by CTUM (Committee on the Teaching of Undergraduate Mathematics) and CTYC (Committee on Two-Year Colleges). Special Interest Groups of the MAA (SIGMAAs) SIGMAAs will be hosting a number of activities, sessions, and guest lectures. There are currently seventeen such focus groups in the MAA offering members opportunities to interact, not only at meetings, but throughout the year, via news- letters and email-based communications. For more information visit www.maa.org/community/sigmaas.

SIGMAA on Mathematics and the Arts (SIGMAA ARTS) Mathematics and the Arts: in the Classroom and Beyond, Wednesday morning and afternoon (see MAA Contributed Paper Sessions).

SIGMAA on Business, Industry, and Government (BIG SIGMAA) Mathematical Experiences and Projects in Business, Industry, and Government (BIG), Thursday morning (see MAA Contributed Paper Sessions).

SIGMAA on Mathematical and Computational Biology (BIO SIGMAA) Trends in Mathematical and Computational Biology, Thursday morning (see MAA Invited Paper Sessions). Business Meeting, Reception, and Guest Lecture, Thursday, 6:00–8:00 pm; Karin Leiderman, Colorado School of Mines, Title to be determined.

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1565 JMM 2020

Mathematics & the Life Sciences: Initiatives, Programs, Curricula, Saturday morning (see MAA Contributed Paper Sessions).

SIGMAA on the History of Mathematics (HOM SIGMAA) MAA Workshop: Teaching Undergraduate Mathematics via Primary Source Projects, Wednesday, 9:00–10:20 am (see MAA Workshops). Business Meeting, Reception, and Guest Lecture, Wednesday, 6:00–8:00 pm; June Barrow-Green, The Open University, Title to be determined. A History of Mathematics in the United States and Canada: A Session in Honor of Math Historian David Zitarelli, Friday morning (see MAA Contributed Paper Sessions).

SIGMAA on Inquiry Based Learning (SIGMAA IBL) Inquiry-Based Learning and Teaching, Wednesday morning and afternoon (see MAA Contributed Paper Sessions). MAA Minicourse #6: Introduction to Inquiry-Based Learning, Part A: Thursday, 9:00–11:00 am, and Part B: Saturday, 9:00–11:00 am (see MAA Minicourses). MAA Workshop: A Classroom Experience with Inquiry-Based Learning, Thursday, 2:35–3:55 pm (see MAA Workshops). Active Learning in Introductory Courses: Insights from Math Departments in the Process of Change, Saturday morning (see MAA Contributed Paper Sessions).

SIGMAA on Math Circles for Students and Teachers (SIGMAA MCST) Tangents to Math Circles, Wednesday afternoon (see MAA Contributed Paper Sessions).

SIGMAA on Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching The Mathematical Knowledge of Teachers as an Integrated Application in Core Mathematics Courses, Saturday morning (see MAA Contributed Paper Sessions).

SIGMAA on the Philosophy of Mathematics (POM SIGMAA) Business Meeting, Reception, and Guest Lecture, Friday, 5:30–7:15 pm: Reception, 5:30–6:00 pm Business Meeting, 6:00–6:15 pm Guest Lecture, 6:15–7:15 pm; Michael Huemer, University of Colorado-Boulder, Possible and Impossible Infinities. Role of Explanation in Mathematical Proofs, Saturday morning (see MAA Contributed Paper Sessions).

SIGMAA on Quantitative Literacy (SIGMAA QL) Business Meeting, Reception, and Guest Lecture, Thursday, 6:00–8:00 pm; Carrie Diaz Eaton, Bates College, Title to be determined. Quantitative Literacy and Social Justice: An Ongoing Dialogue, Friday morning (see MAA Contributed Paper Sessions).

SIGMAA on Recreational Mathematics Recreational Mathematics: Puzzles, Card Tricks, Games, & Gambling, Thursday morning and afternoon (see MAA Con- tributed Paper Sessions).

SIGMAA on Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education (SIGMAA on RUME) Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education, Thursday morning and afternoon (see MAA Contributed Paper Sessions). Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education: Highlights from the Annual SIGMAA on RUME Conference, Wednes- day afternoon (see MAA Invited Paper Sessions).

SIGMAA on Sports Mathematics & Sports, Friday morning and afternoon (see MAA Contributed Paper Sessions).

SIGMAA on Statistics Education (SIGMAA Stat Ed) MAA Minicourse #2: Teaching Reproducible Statistics with R and R Studio, Part A: Wednesday, 9:00–11:00 am, and Part B: Friday, 9:00–11:00 am (see MAA Minicourses).

1566 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020

MAA Minicourse #8: Stats for Data Science, Part A: Thursday, 1:00–3:00 pm, and Part B: Saturday, 1:00–3:00 pm (see MAA Minicourses). MAA Panel: So You Want to Start an Undergraduate Statistics or Data Science Program?, Thursday, 9:00–10:20 am (see MAA Panels). Data Across the Curriculum, Friday morning (see MAA Contributed Paper Sessions). Scholarship on Teaching and Learning Statistics, Friday afternoon (see MAA Contributed Paper Sessions). Business Meeting, Reception, and Guest Lecture, Friday, 6:00–8:20 pm: Reception, 6:00–6:30 pm Business Meeting, 6:30–7:15 pm Guest Lecture, 7:20–8:20 pm; Trevor Patch, Baseball Research and Development with the Colorado Rockies, The importance of statisticians in a development-driven world. Modernizing the Introductory Statistics Course, Saturday morning (see MAA Invited Paper Sessions).

SIGMAA on Undergraduate Research (SIGMAA UR) MAA Panel: Students’ Perspectives on Undergraduate Research Experiences, Wednesday, 6:00–7:00 pm (see MAA Panels).

SIGMAA on Mathematics Instruction Using the Web (WEB SIGMAA) Reception and Guest Lecture, Friday, 5:30–7:00 pm: Reception, 5:30–6:00 pm Guest Lecture, 6:00–7:00 pm; Matthew Boelkins, Grand Valley State University, The Future of Textbooks. MAA Minicourse #4: Visualizing Multivariable Calculus & Differential Equations using CalcPlot3D, Part A: Wednesday, 2:15–4:15 pm, and Part B: Friday, 1:00–3:00 pm (see MAA Minicourses). MAA Sessions for Students Please see complete descriptions of these sessions on the JMM website. Radical Dash!, organized by Stacey Muir, University of Scranton, and Janine Janoski, Kings College; Radical Dash Kickoff Meeting: Wednesday, 10:20–10:50 am, and Radical Dash Prize Session: Friday, 10:30–11:00 am. The Radical Dash! is sponsored by MAA Committee on Undergraduate Students (CUS). MAA Panel: What Every Student Should Know about the JMM, organized by Peri Shereen, California State University, Monterey Bay, and Violeta Vasilevska, Utah Valley University; Wednesday, 9:00–10:20 am. Panelists are Joyati Debnath, Winona State University, Matt DeLong, Marian University, and Frank Morgan, Williams College. This panel is sponsored by the MAA Committee for Undergraduate Students. Estimathon!, organized by Andy Niedermaier, Jane Street Capital; Thursday, 10:00 am–12:00 pm. This event is spon- sored by Jane Street Capital and the MAA Committee on Undergraduate Students (CUS). Grad School Fair, Friday, 8:30–10:30 am. Here is the opportunity for undergrads to meet representatives from mathe- matical sciences graduate programs from universities all over the country. Cosponsored by the AMS and MAA. MAA Lecture for Students: On the scales of one to infinity: Learning to listen to your mathematics, Ami Radunskaya, Pomona College; Friday, 1:00 pm. MAA Student Poster Session, organized by Chasen Smith, Georgia Southern University, and Eric Ruggieri, College of the Holy Cross; Friday, 4:30–6:00 pm. Please see full description under MAA Poster and Other Sessions. This session is sponsored by the MAA Committee on Undergraduate Students (CUS). Project NExT Project NExT Workshop, Wednesday–Saturday, 8:00 am–6:00 pm. Project NExT Lecture on Teaching and Learning, Federico Ardila, San Francisco State University, Todxs Cuentan: Differ- ence, humanity, and belonging in the mathematics classroom; Thursday, 11:10 am–12:00 pm. See details about the reception on Friday in Social Events. Other MAA Events MAA Section Officers Meeting, chaired by Lisa Marano, West Chester University of Pennsylvania; Wednesday, 4:00–5:00 pm. MAA Business Meeting, chaired by MAA President Michael Dorff, Brigham Young University, and organized by MAA Secretary James Sellers, University of Minnesota Duluth; Saturday, 11:10–11:40 am.

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1567 JMM 2020

MAA Workshops Please see complete descriptions of these sessions on the JMM website. MAA Workshop: Teaching Undergraduate Mathematics via Primary Source Projects, organized by Janet H. Barnett, Colorado State University-Pueblo, Kathleen M. Clark, Florida State University, Dominic Klyve, Central Washington University, Danny E. Otero, Xavier University, Nicholas A. Scoville, Ursinus College, and Diana White, University of Colorado, Denver; Wednesday, 9:00–10:20 am. This workshop is sponsored by the History of Mathematics SIGMAA. MAA Workshop: Designing and Implementing Assessments in Undergraduate Mathematics: Strategies and Examples, orga- nized by Beste Gucler, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, and Gulden Karakok, University of Northern Colorado; Wednesday, 2:15–3:25 pm. This workshop is sponsored by the MAA Committee on Assessment. MAA Workshop: Improving Undergraduate Mathematics Courses Using Problems from Partner Disciplines, organized by Suzanne Dorée, Augsburg University, Susan Ganter, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Stella Hofrenning, Augsburg University, Victor Piercey, Ferris State University, and Jody Sorensen, Augsburg University; Wednesday, 3:40–5:00 pm. This workshop is sponsored by CRAFTY and MAD. Premiere of a Documentary Film about the Duluth REU, organized by Shah Roshan Zamir, University of Nebraska-Lin- coln; Wednesday, 5:00–6:00 pm. MAA Workshop: Generating Ideas of Undergraduate Research Projects, organized by Pamela Harris, Williams College, and Azadeh Rafizadeh, William Jewell College; Thursday, 9:00–10:20 am. This workshop is sponsored by the MAA Sub- committee on Research by Undergraduates. MAA Workshop: Identifying and Managing Microaggressions in the Academic Setting, organized by Semra Kiliç-Bahi, Colby-Sawyer College, and Omayra Ortega, Sonoma State University; Thursday, 10:35–11:55 am. This session is spon- sored by the Joint Committee on Women in Mathematical Sciences, MAA Committee on the Participation of Women in Mathematics, Committee on the Minority Participation in Mathematics, and the National Association of Mathematicians. Town Hall Meeting: Swap Session for Teaching Aligned with the Instructional Practices Guide, organized by Carolyn Yackel, Mercer University, and Chris Oehrlein, Oklahoma City Community College; Saturday, 8:00–9:20 am. This ses- sion is sponsored by CTUM (Committee on the Teaching of Undergraduate Mathematics) and CTYC (Committee on Two-Year Colleges). MAA Mathematical Competition in Modeling (MCM) Winners, organized by Ben Fusaro, Florida State University; Saturday, 9:00–10:15 am. Activities of Other Organizations This section includes scientific sessions. Several organizations or special groups are having receptions or other social events. Please see the Social Events section of this announcement for those details. Please see complete descriptions of these sessions on the JMM website. Association for Symbolic Logic (ASL) This two-day program on Friday and Saturday will include sessions of contributed papers as well as Invited Addresses by Cameron Freer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Representation theorems for exchangeable structures: a computability theoretic perspective; Victoria Gitman, City University of New York Graduate Center, Toy multiverses of set theory; Wesley Holliday, University of California Berkeley, Axiomatizing reasoning about sets: cardinality, mereology, and decisiveness; Alex- ander Kechris, California Institute of Technology, Countable Borel equivalence relations; Benjamin Rossman, University of Toronto, On circuit complexity and finite model theory; Margaret Thomas, University of Konstanz, Title to be announced; and Linda Brown Westrick, Pennsylvania State University, Reverse math of Borel sets. See also the sessions cosponsored by the ASL in the AMS Special Sessions listings. These sessions include Choiceless set theory and related areas on Wednesday morning and Thursday afternoon. Organizers for this session are Paul Larson, Miami University, and Jindrich Zapletal, University of Florida. Also cosponsored by the ASL is the session on Logic facing outward on Wednesday afternoon and Thursday morning. Organizers for this session are Karen Lange, Wellesley College, and Russell Miller, Queens College. Association for Women in Mathematics (AWM) Forty-first Annual Noether Lecture, Thursday, 10:05 am, will be given by Birgit Speh, Cornell University, Branching Laws for Representations of Non Compact Orthogonal Groups. Association for Women in Mathematics Panel: Queer Families and Mathematical Careers, organized by Alice Mark, Van- derbilt University, Corrin Clarkson, New York University, and Alex Hoover, University of Akron; Wednesday, 2:15–3:40

1568 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020 pm. This session is open to all JMM attendees. Panelists include Amanda Folsom, Amherst College, Matt Voigt, San Diego State University, May Mei, Denison University, Chikako Mese, Johns Hopkins University, and Maggie Tomova, University of Iowa. Alice Mark, Vanderbilt University, will be the panel moderator. Business Meeting, Wednesday, 3:45–4:15 pm. Chairs: Ruth Haas, AWM President, and Ami Radunskaya, AWM past-President. Workshop Poster Presentations and Reception, Friday, 5:00–6:15 pm. AWM will conduct its workshop poster presentations by women graduate students. AWM seeks volunteers to serve as mentors for workshop participants. If you are interested, please contact the AWM office at [email protected]. This session is open to all JMM attendees. Organizers for these presentations are Loredana Lanzani, Syracuse University, Radmila Sazdanovic, North Carolina State University, Yusu Wang, Ohio State University, and Liz Vivas, Ohio State University. The Poster Judging Coordinator is Emilie Wiesner, Ithaca College. AWM Workshop: Moving Towards Action Workshop, Tuesday, 8:00 am–5:00 pm. To apply to participate, please see https://awm-math.org/meetings/jmm-2020-workshop and apply by October 1. AWM Workshop: Women in Several Complex Variables (WinSCV), Saturday, 8:00 am–5:00 pm. Updated information about the workshop is available at https://www.awm-math.org. All JMM attendees are invited to attend the program. Organizers for this workshop are Loredana Lanzani, Syracuse University, and Liz Vivas, Ohio State University. Reception, Thursday, 6:00–7:30 pm. See the listing in the Social Events section of the announcement. See also the sessions cosponsored by AWM in the AMS Special Sessions listings: AMS-AWM Special Session on Mathe- matical and Computational Research in Data Science, organized by Linda Ness, DIMACS, Rutgers University, and F. Patricia Medina, Yeshiva University; AMS-AWM Special Session on Representation Theory Inspired by the Langlands Conjectures (Associated with Joint AWM-AMS Noether Lecture Birgit Speh), organized by Birgit Speh, Cornell University, and Peter Trapa, University of Utah; AMS-AWM Special Session on Women in Mathematical Biology, organized by Christina Edholm, University of Tennessee, Amanda Laubmeier, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Katharine Gurski, Howard University, and Heather Zinn Brooks, University of California Los Angeles; AMS-AWM Special Session on Women in Symplectic and Contact Geometry, organized by Morgan Weiler, Rice University, Catherine Cannizzo, Simons Center for Geometry and Physics, and Melissa Zhang, University of Georgia; and AMS-AWM Special Session on Women in Topology, organized by Jocelyn Bell, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Rochy Flint, Columbia University Teachers College, Candice Price, Smith College, and Arunima Ray, Max Planck Institute for Mathematics. National Association of Mathematicians (NAM) Haynes-Granville-Browne Session of Presentations by Recent Doctoral Recipients in the Mathematical Sciences, Friday, 1:00–4:00 pm. Organized by Naiomi Cameron, Spelman College/NAM, and Edray Goins, Pomona College/NAM. Cox-Talbot Address, to be given Friday after the banquet. Details regarding the Cox-Talbot Address are to be announced. See details about the banquet on Friday in the Social Events section. Panel Discussion, Details are to be announced. Business Meeting, Saturday, 10:00–10:50 am. Claytor-Woodward Lecture, Saturday, 1:00 pm, Suzanne Weekes, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, A Numerical and Analytical Study of Dynamic Materials. National Science Foundation (NSF) The NSF will be represented at a booth in the exhibit area. NSF staff members will be available to provide counsel and information on NSF programs of interest to mathematicians. The booth is open the same days as the exhibits. Times that staff will be available will be posted at the booth. Pi Mu Epsilon (PME) Council Meeting, Thursday, 8:00–11:00 am. Rocky Mountain Consortium Board Meeting, Friday, 2:15–4:00 pm. Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM) This program consists of an Invited Address, The Mathematics of Life: Making Diffusion your Friend, at 11:10 am on Thursday, given by James Keener, University of Utah, and a series of Minisymposia including Recent Advances and New Trends in Modeling and Simulation of Systems with Multiple Scales, Coupled Phenomena and Interfaces, Yekaterina Ep-

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1569 JMM 2020 shteyn, University of Utah; Applications of machine learning to the analysis of nonlinear dynamical systems, Juan G. Re- strepo, University of Colorado at Boulder, and Maziar Raissi, Brown University; Preparing faculty to prepare students for tomorrow's workforce, Kate Kavanagh, Clarkson University; Mathematical modeling and simulation of complex biological systems, Karin Leidermann, Colorado School of Mines; Derivative free optimization for high-dimensional problems, Louis Tenorio, Colorado School of Mines; Mathematics at the National Laboratories, Stephen J. Young, Pacific Northwest Na- tional Laboratory, Timothy Doster, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Tegan Emerson, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, and Emilie Purvine, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory; Random matrices and integrable systems, Ken McLaughlin, Colorado State University, and Sean O’Rourke, Colorado University at Boulder; and Deterministic and probabilistic approaches for nonlinear PDEs, Hakima Bessaih, University of Wyoming. See also the session cosponsored by SIAM in the AMS Special Sessions listings: AMS-MAA-SIAM Special Session on Re- search in Mathematics by Undergraduates and Students in Post-Baccalaureate Programs, organized by Darren A. Narayan, Rochester Institute of Technology, Khang Tran, California State University, Fresno, Mark David Ward, Purdue University, and John Wierman, The Johns Hopkins University. Other Events Please see complete descriptions of these sessions on the JMM website. Association of Christians in the Mathematical Sciences (ACMS) Reception and Lecture, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 pm. The reception will take place between 5:30 and 6:30 pm, followed by a short program and 20-minute talk by Gerard Venema. BSME Information Session, Friday, 12:00–1:00 pm. bsmeducation.com Summer Program for Women in Mathematics (SPWM) Reunion, organized by Murli M. Gupta, George Washington University; Thursday, 1:00–3:00 pm. See www.gwu.edu/~spwm. Mathemati-Con Events will take place on Saturday, January 18 between 9:00 am and 4:00 pm in a variety of locations at the JMM. Some special presentations slated to be included in this program are the Who Wants to Be a Mathematician Champi- onship, the 2020 Mathematical Art Exhibition, a Showtime! presentation, and much more, concluding with the MAA-AMS- SIAM Gerald and Judith Porter Public Lecture: The Fantastic Intersection of Math and Sports: Where No One is Afraid of a Decimal Point, by Rajiv Maheswaran, Second Spectrum. All events on the Mathemati-Con program are open to the public. Mathematical Art Exhibition, organized by Robert Fathauer, Tessellations Company, Nathan Selikoff, Digital Awakening Studios, and Elizabeth Whiteley, studio artist, Washington, DC, and supported by the Special Interest Group of the MAA for Mathematics and the Arts, and the Bridges Organization. The exhibition will be located inside the Joint Mathematics Exhibits and open during the same exhibit hours. Who Wants to Be a Mathematician Championship, organized by Michael A. Breen, American Mathematical Society, and William T. Butterworth, DePaul University; Saturday, 1:00–2:45 pm. The Fantastic Intersection of Math and Sports: Where No One is Afraid of a Decimal Point (MAA-AMS-SIAM Gerald and Judith Porter Public Lecture), Rajiv Maheswaran, Second Spectrum; Saturday, 3:00 pm. Welcoming Environment Policy The AMS and MAA strive to ensure that participants in the JMM enjoy a welcoming environment. In all its activities, the AMS and MAA seek to foster an atmosphere that encourages the free expression and exchange of ideas. The AMS and MAA support equality of opportunity and treatment for all participants, regardless of gender, gender identity or expres- sion, race, color, national or ethnic origin, religion or religious belief, age, marital status, sexual orientation, disabilities, or veteran status. Harassment is a form of misconduct that undermines the integrity of the AMS and MAA, and their activities and missions. The AMS and MAA will make every effort to maintain an environment that is free of harassment, even though it does not control the behavior of third parties. A commitment to a welcoming environment is expected of all participants of JMM activities, including mathematicians, students, guests, staff, contractors and exhibitors, and participants in scientific sessions and social events. To this end, the AMS and MAA will include a statement concerning its expectations towards maintaining a welcoming environment in registration materials for the JMM, and has put in place a mechanism for re- porting violations. Violations may be reported confidentially and anonymously to 855-282-5703 or at www.mathsociety .ethicspoint.com. The reporting mechanism ensures the respect of privacy while alerting the AMS and MAA to the

1570 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020 situation. Violations may also be brought to the attention of the AMS Director of Meetings & Conferences (who is usually at the meeting registration desk), and that person can provide advice about how to proceed. Exhibits The Joint Mathematics Meetings Exhibits include the country’s leading scientific publishers, professional organizations, companies that offer mathematics enrichment products and services, computer hardware and software companies, and the Mathematical Art Exhibit. It will be open to all registered participants on Wednesday (starting with the Grand Opening), 12:15–5:30 pm, on Thursday and Friday, 9:30 am–5:30 pm, and on Saturday, 9:00 am–12:00 pm. See more details at www .jointmathematicsmeetings.org. Hotel Accommodations The importance of reserving a hotel room at one of the official Joint Mathematics Meetings (JMM) hotels cannot be stressed enough. The AMS and the MAA make every effort to keep participants’ expenses at the meeting, registration fees, and hotel rooms for the meeting as low as possible. They work hard to negotiate the most affordable hotel rates and to maximize the best use of your registration dollars. The AMS and MAA encourage all participants to register for the meeting. When anyone pays the registration fee and reserves a room with an official JMM hotel, he or she is helping to support not only the 2020 JMM, but future meetings as well. Please see the complete list of hotels and their descriptions on the JMM website.

Housing Warning Please beware of aggressive housing bureaus that target potential attendees of a meeting. They are sometimes called “room poachers” or “room-block pirates,” and these companies generally position themselves as a meeting‘s housing bureau, convincing attendees to unknowingly book outside the official room block. They call people who they think will more likely than not attend a meeting and lure them with room rates that are significantly less than the published group rate—for a limited time only. And people who find this offer tempting may hand over their credit card data, believing they have scored a great rate and their housing is a done deal. Unfortunately, this often turns out to be the start of a long, costly nightmare. Note that some of these room poachers create fake websites on which they represent themselves as the or- ganizers of the meeting and include links to book rooms, etc. The only official website for this meeting is www .jointmathematicsmeetings.org. These housing bureaus are not affiliated with the American Mathematical Society or any of its meetings, in any way. The AMS would never call anyone to solicit reservations for a meeting. The only way to book a room at a rate negotiated for an AMS meeting is via a listing on AMS meetings pages or Notices of the AMS. The AMS cannot be responsible for any damages incurred as a result of hotel bookings made with unofficial housing bureaus. Miscellaneous Please see details about audio-visual equipment; email services; information distribution; local information; the JMM Broadcasting, Photographing, and Videotaping Policy; and telephone messages on the JMM website. Child Care Grants The AMS and the MAA will provide a limited number of reimbursement grants of US$250 per family to help with the cost of child care for registered participants at JMM 2020. The funds may be used for child care that frees a parent to participate more fully in JMM. Registration for the JMM as well as membership in the AMS or MAA is required to apply for this program. Information about applying for child care grants will be available prior to the opening of advance registration in Sep- tember; watch the JMM website for details. Applications will be accepted on a first-come, first-served basis until October 22, 2019. Final decisions on recipients will be made on or before November 12, 2019. All grant funds will be provided in the form of a check which will be issued at the JMM.

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1571 JMM 2020 Registration The AMS and the MAA encourage all participants to register for the Joint Mathematics Meetings (JMM). The importance of registering for the meeting, especially before the meeting, cannot be overemphasized. Advanced registration fees are considerably lower than on-site registration fees, and paying a registration fee helps to support a wide range of activities associated with planning, organizing, and executing the meetings. All participants who wish to attend sessions are expected to register for the JMM and should be prepared to show their badges, if so requested. Badges are required to enter the Exhibits and the Employment Center, to obtain discounts at the AMS and MAA Book Sales, and to cash a check with the Joint Meetings cashier. The Mathematics Meetings Service Bureau (MMSB) is the official registration and housing bureau for the JMM and they will be processing all registrations. Cancellation Policy: To cancel registration for the JMM, minicourses, Short Course, or banquet tickets, please do so by January 8, 2020 to be eligible to receive a 50% refund of fees paid. No refunds will be issued after this date. Please see additional details about registration category definitions, registration deadlines, and how to register on the JMM website. Joint Mathematics Meetings Registration Fees Advanced (by Dec. 26) At Meeting Member of AMS, ASL, CMS, MAA, SIAM...... US$360...... US$473 Non-member...... 570...... 727 Graduate Student Member of AMS, ASL, CMS, MAA, SIAM...... 90...... 104 Graduate Student Non-member...... 140...... 152 Undergraduate Student Member of AMS, ASL, CMS, MAA, PME, KME, SIAM...... 80...... 94 Undergraduate Student Non-member...... 130...... 142 Temporarily Employed...... 292...... 335 Emeritus Member of AMS, MAA...... 292...... 335 Unemployed; High School Teacher; Developing Countries; Librarian...... 80...... 94 High School Student...... 10...... 20

One-Day Member of AMS, ASL, CMS, MAA, SIAM...... N/A...... 257 One-Day Non-member...... N/A...... 400

Non-mathematician Guest...... 25...... 25 Commercial Exhibitor...... 0...... 0 Art Exhibitor...... 0...... 0 MAA Minicourses...... 100...... 100 Grad School Fair Table...... 130...... 130

AMS Short Course: Member of AMS...... 151...... 185 Non-member...... 232...... 275 Social Events All events listed are open to all registered participants. It is strongly recommended that, for any events requiring tickets, tickets be purchased through advanced registration. Only a very limited number of tickets, if any, will be available for sale on-site. If you must cancel your participation in a ticketed event, you may request a 50% refund by returning your tickets to the Mathematics Meetings Service Bureau (MMSB) by January 8, 2020. After that date, no refunds can be made. Special meals are available at banquets upon advance request, but this must be indicated on the Advanced Registration/ Housing Form. Please see complete descriptions of each event on the JMM website.

AMS Social at JMM 2020: Mathematicians in the Performing Arts, Saturday, January 18, 6:00–9:30 pm, Chambers Grant Salon – Kevin Taylor’s at the Opera House, Denver Performing Arts Complex, 1355 Curtis Street, Denver, CO (0.2 mile walk from Colorado Convention Center). Discounted tickets for students and children are available: US$35 stu-

1572 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020 dent and child ticket/US$75 regular ticket. Purchase tickets when registering for JMM 2020 at: www.jointmathematics meetings.org. Association of Christians in the Mathematical Sciences (ACMS) Reception and Lecture, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 pm. The reception will take place between 5:30 and 6:30 pm, followed by a short program and 20-minute talk by Gerard Venema. Association for Women in Mathematics Reception and Awards Presentation, The AWM Reception, which is open to all JMM participants, will be held on Thursday at 6:00–7:30 pm. Backgammon!, organized by Arthur Benjamin, Harvey Mudd College; Friday, 8:00–10:00 pm. Budapest Semesters in Mathematics Annual Alumni Reunion, Thursday, 5:30–6:30 pm. University of California San Diego, Department of Mathematics Reception, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 pm. Reception for Mathematics alumni. University of Chicago Mathematics Alumni Reception, Thursday, 6:00–7:00 pm. Reception for Graduate Students and First-Time Participants, Wednesday, 5:30–6:30 pm. ICERM Mixer, Friday, 6:00–8:00 pm. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Friday, 5:30–7:30 pm. Johns Hopkins University Department of Mathematics and Department of Applied Mathematics & Statistics Reception, Thursday, 6:00–7:30 pm. Knitting Circle, Thursday, 8:15–9:45 pm. MAA/Project NExT Reception, Friday, 8:00–10:00 pm. Organized by Julia Barnes, West Carolina University, Alissa Crans, Loyola Marymount University, Matt DeLong, Taylor University, and David Kung, St Mary’s College of Maryland. Mathematical Reviews Reception, Friday, 6:00–7:00 pm. Mathematical Institutes Open House, Wednesday, 5:30–8:00 pm. The Mathematical Sciences Research Institute (MSRI) Reception for Current and Future Donors, Thursday, 6:30–8:00 pm. www.msri.org {MathILY, MathILy-Er} Yearly Gather, Wednesday, 7:00–8:30 pm. University of Michigan Alumni and Friends Reception, Thursday, 5:30–7:00 pm. National Association of Mathematicians Banquet, Friday, 6:00–8:40 pm. A cash bar reception will be held at 6:00 pm, and dinner will be served at 6:30 pm. Tickets are US$65 each, including tax and gratuity. The Cox-Talbot Invited Address will be given after the dinner. Nebraska Conference for Undergraduate Women in Mathematics Reunion, Wednesday, 6:00–7:30 pm. NSA’s Women in Mathematics Society (WiMS) Networking Session, Thursday, 6:00–8:00 pm. Penn State’s Eberly College of Science and Department of Mathematics Reception, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 pm. PROMYS and Ross Reception for Alumni and Friends, Thursday, 6:30–8:30 pm. SCUDEM Gathering and Information Session, Friday, 7:00–8:30 pm. Spectra Reception for LGBT Mathematicians, Thursday, 6:00–8:00 pm. Texas A&M University Mathematics Department Reception for Alumni, Students, and Faculty, Friday, 6:00–8:00 pm. Reception for Undergraduates, Wednesday, 4:30–5:30 pm. University of Waterloo Faculty of Mathematics Reception, Thursday, 6:00–8:00 pm. YP17 HCSSiM Reunion Breakfast, Friday, 7:17–9:00 am. Travel/Transportation The 2020 Joint Mathematics Meetings will be held at the Colorado Convention Center (CCC), located at 700 14th Street, Denver, CO 80202. The Hyatt Regency at Colorado Convention Center, located at 650 15th Street, Denver, CO 80202, will be the headquarters/host hotel. Committee meetings, governance meetings, the AMS Short Course, and the majority of the social events will be located in the Hyatt Regency. Everything else will be located in the CCC. Denver is on Mountain Standard Time. Airport Denver International Airport (DEN, https://www.flydenver.com) is served by all major airlines and is approximately 30 miles from the Convention Center area. The street address of the airport is 8500 Peña Blvd, Denver, CO 80249. Train Denver Union Station is located at 1701 Wynkoop Street, Denver, CO 80202, approximately 1 mile from the Convention Center. It is possible to travel to Denver via Amtrak. See www.amtrak.com or call 1-800-USA-RAIL for more information. Please see details about travel and transportation options on the JMM website.

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1573 JMM 2020

Program Timetable

This document provides a thumbnail sketch of all scientific and social events so you can easily see which events may overlap and better plan your time.

Monday, January 13 8:00 am–5:30 pm AMS Short Course on Mean Field Games: Agent Based Models to Nash Equilibria 5:00–6:00 pm AMS Short Course Reception

Tuesday, January 14 8:00 am–5:30 pm AMS Short Course on Mean Field Games: Agent Based Models to Nash Equilibria 8:00 am–5:00 pm AWM Moving Towards Action Workshop 8:00 am–6:30 pm AMS Department Chairs Workshop 1:30–10:00 pm AMS Council 3:00–7:00 pm Joint Meetings Registration Advanced registration will remain open until 7:30 pm. 3:00–7:30 pm Email Center

Wednesday, January 15 7:00 am–6:00 pm Joint Meetings Registration 7:00 am–9:30 pm Email Center 7:00–8:45 am MAA Minority Chairs Meeting AMS Special Sessions 8:00–11:00 am Research in Mathematics by Undergraduates and Students in Post-Baccalaureate Programs, I (AMS-MAA-SIAM) 8:00–11:00 am Choiceless Set Theory and Related Areas, I (AMS-ASL) 8:00–11:00 am Women in Mathematical Biology, I (AMS-AWM) 8:00–11:00 am Women in Symplectic and Contact Geometry, I (AMS-AWM) 8:00–11:00 am If You Build It They Will Come: Presentations by Scholars in the National Alliance for Doctoral Studies in the Mathematical Sciences, I 8:00–11:00 am Cohomological Field Theories and Wall Crossing, I 8:00–11:00 am Interactions Among Partitions, Basic Hypergeometric Series, and Modular Forms, I 8:00–11:00 am Noncommutative Geometry and Applications, I 8:00–11:00 am Iterative Methods for Large-Scale Data Analysis, I

1574 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020

8:00–11:00 am Spectral and Transport Properties of Disordered Systems, I 8:00–11:00 am Symbolic Dynamics, I 8:00–11:00 am Interactions of Inverse Problems, Computational Harmonic Analysis, and Imaging, I 8:00–11:00 am Algebras and Algorithms, I 8:00–11:00 am Frames, Designs, and Optimal Spherical Configurations, I 8:00–11:00 am Singularities and Characteristic Classes, I 8:00–11:00 am Sequences, Words, and Automata, I 8:00–11:00 am Recent Developments in Numerical Methods for PDEs, I 8:00–11:00 am Hamiltonian Systems, I 8:00–11:00 am Group Actions in Harmonic Analysis, I 8:00–11:00 am Coding Theory and Applications, I 8:00–11:00 am Research in Graph Theory and Combinatorics by Research Experience for Undergraduate Faculty (REUF) Alumni and Their Students, I MAA Invited Paper Sessions 8:00–10:50 am Creating Spaces for Mathematics 8:00–10:55 am AMS Contributed Paper Sessions 8:00–10:55 am MAA General Contributed Paper Sessions 8:00–10:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on The Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Collegiate Mathematics, I 8:00–11:00 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Discrete Mathematics in the Undergraduate Curriculum - Ideas and Innovations in Teaching, I 8:00–10:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Teaching Mathematics with Humor or Pop Culture 8:00–10:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Best Practices and Considerations in Designing and Developing Online Math Courses 8:00–11:00 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Mathematics and the Arts: in the Classroom and Beyond, I 8:00–10:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Inquiry-Based Learning and Teaching, I 8:00–10:55 am SIAM Minisymposium on Recent Advances and New Trends in Modeling and Simulation of Systems with Multiple Scales, Coupled Phenomena and Interfaces 8:00 am–5:30 pm Employment Center 9:00–11:00 am MAA Minicourse #1: Part A Using Automated Software to Learn and Teach Numerical Solution of Partial Differential Equations 9:00–11:00 am MAA Minicourse #2: Part A Teaching Reproducible Statistics with R and R Studio 9:00–11:00 am MAA Minicourse #3: Part A Creating and Adapting OER Textbooks Using the LibreTexts Platform 9:00–9:45 am MAA-SIAM-AMS Hrabowski-Gates-Tapia-McBay Session: Lecture 9:00–10:30 am AMS Directors of Undergraduate Studies 9:00–10:20 am MAA Panel Assessment for Accreditation: Lots of Little Fish Make a Large School 9:00–10:20 am MAA Panel What Every Student Should Know about the JMM 9:00–10:20 am MAA Workshop Teaching Undergraduate Mathematics via Primary Source Projects 9:50–10:30 am MAA-SIAM-AMS Hrabowski-Gates-Tapia-McBay Panel

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1575 JMM 2020

10:05–10:55 am AMS Invited Address The Geometric Disposition of Diophantine Equations. Anthony Várilly- Alvarado 10:20–10:50 am Radical Dash Kickoff Meeting 11:10 am–12:00 pm AMS-MAA Invited Address Different Problems, Common Threads: Computing the Difficulty of Mathematical Problems. Karen Lange 12:15–5:30 pm Exhibits and Book Sales 1:00–1:50 pm AMS Colloquium Lectures: Lecture I Mathematical frameworks for signal and image analysis. Lecture 1: Multiresolution analysis, wavelets and beyond. Ingrid Daubechies 2:15–3:05 pm MAA Invited Address Mazes, riddles, zombies, and unicorns! Scott Adamson AMS Special Sessions 2:15–6:00 pm Logic Facing Outward, I (Associated with Joint AMS-MAA Invited Address Karen Lange) (AMS- ASL) 2:15–6:00 pm Women in Mathematical Biology, II (AMS-AWM) 2:15–6:00 pm Women in Symplectic and Contact Geometry, II (AMS-AWM) 2:15–6:00 pm Rational Points on Algebraic Varieties: Theory and Computation, I (Associated with AMS Invited Address Anthony Várilly-Alvarado) 2:15–6:00 pm Outreach Strategies for Reaching Underrepresented Students at the Pre-College Level, I 2:15–6:00 pm If You Build It They Will Come: Presentations by Scholars in the National Alliance for Doctoral Studies in the Mathematical Sciences, II 2:15–6:00 pm Cohomological Field Theories and Wall Crossing, II 2:15–6:00 pm Interactions Among Partitions, Basic Hypergeometric Series, and Modular Forms, II 2:15–6:00 pm Noncommutative Geometry and Applications, II 2:15–6:00 pm Spectral and Transport Properties of Disordered Systems, II 2:15–6:00 pm Symbolic Dynamics, II 2:15–6:00 pm Quantization for Probability Distributions and Dynamical Systems 2:15–6:00 pm Interactions of Inverse Problems, Computational Harmonic Analysis, and Imaging, II 2:15–6:00 pm Algebras and Algorithms, II 2:15–6:00 pm Frames, Designs, and Optimal Spherical Configurations, II 2:15–6:00 pm Singularities and Characteristic Classes, II 2:15–6:00 pm Sequences, Words, and Automata, II 2:15–6:00 pm How to Discover and Train Gifted Students 2:15–6:00 pm Recent Developments in Numerical Methods for PDEs, II 2:15–6:00 pm Combinatorial Structures and Integrable Systems 2:15–6:00 pm Group Actions in Harmonic Analysis, II 2:15–6:00 pm Coding Theory and Applications, II 2:15–6:00 pm Research in Graph Theory and Combinatorics by Research Experience for Undergraduate Faculty (REUF) Alumni and Their Students, II MAA Invited Paper Sessions 2:15–4:35 pm Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education: Highlights from the Annual SIGMAA on RUME

1576 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020

2:15–4:15 pm MAA Minicourse #4: Part A Visualizing Multivariable Calculus & Differential Equations Using CalcPlot3D 2:15–4:15 pm MAA Minicourse #5: Part A Visual Complex Analysis- GeoGebra Tools and Mapping Diagrams 2:15–4:15 pm MAA Minicourse #9: Part A Combining Mathematical and Computational Thinking in a General Education Math Course 2:15–6:00 pm AMS Contributed Paper Sessions 2:15–3:45 pm AMS Panel Discussion Mental Health in the Mathematics Profession 2:15–6:00 pm MAA General Contributed Paper Sessions 2:15–5:55 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on The Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Collegiate Mathematics, II 2:15–5:55 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on Discrete Mathematics in the Undergraduate Curriculum - Ideas and Innovations in Teaching, II 2:15–5:55 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on Integrating Research into the Undergraduate Classroom 2:15–6:00 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on Mathematics and the Arts: in the Classroom and Beyond, II 2:15–5:55 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on Inquiry-Based Learning and Teaching, II 2:15–5:55 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on Tangents to Math Circles 2:15–6:00 pm SIAM Minisymposium on Applications of machine learning to the analysis of nonlinear dynamical systems 2:15–3:35 pm MAA Panel Leveraging Social Media for the Greater Good of Mathematics 2:15–3:35 pm MAA Panel Strategies for Mid-Career Faculty 2:15–3:25 pm MAA Workshop Designing and Implementing Assessments in Undergraduate Mathematics: Strategies and Examples 2:15–3:40 pm Association for Women in Mathematics Panel Discussion Queer Families and Mathematical Careers 2:15–2:45 pm The Dolciani Award Lectures Presentation by the 2019 Mary P. Dolciani Award winner, Joseph Gallian 3:00–3:55 pm Relatively Prime Live: Truthiness in the Mathematical Domain 3:20–4:10 pm MAA Invited Address The Art and Craft of Problem Design. Mohamed Omar 3:40–5:00 pm MAA Workshop Improving Undergraduate Mathematics Courses Using Problems from Partner Disciplines 3:45–4:15 pm AWM Business Meeting 4:00–5:00 pm MAA Section Officers 4:30–6:00 pm AMS Committee on the Profession Panel Discussion Mathematics and Ethics 4:30–5:30 pm Reception for Undergraduate Students 5:00–6:00 pm Premiere of a documentary film about the Duluth REU Join us for the first ever public showing of a film about the Duluth REU, the longest running REU in the nation. Shah Roshan Zamir 5:30–6:30 pm Reception for Graduate Students and First-Time Participants 5:30–8:00 pm Mathematical Institutes Open House

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1577 JMM 2020

6:00–8:00 pm SIGMAA on the History of Mathematics (HOM SIGMAA) Business Meeting, Reception, and Guest Speaker 6:00–7:30 pm Johns Hopkins University, Department of Mathematics and Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics Reception 7:00–8:30 pm {MathILY, MathILy-Er} Yearly Gather 8:30–9:20 pm AMS Josiah Willard Gibbs Lecture Statistical Theory and Practice. Nancy Reid

Thursday, January 16 7:30 am–7:00 pm Email Center 7:30 am–4:00 pm Joint Meetings Registration AMS Special Sessions 8:00 am–12:00 pm Research in Mathematics by Undergraduates and Students in Post-Baccalaureate Programs, II (AMS-MAA-SIAM) 8:00 am–12:00 pm Logic Facing Outward, II (Associated with Joint AMS-MAA Invited Address Karen Lange) (AMS- ASL) 8:00 am–12:00 pm Rational Points on Algebraic Varieties: Theory and Computation, II (Associated with AMS Invited Address Anthony Várilly-Alvarado) 8:00 am–12:00 pm Analytic and Probabilistic Combinatorics, I 8:00 am–12:00 pm Mathematical Analysis in Data Science, I (Associated with AMS Colloquium Lectures Ingrid Daubechies) 8:00 am–12:00 pm Geometric Representation Theory and Equivariant Elliptic Cohomology, I (a Mathematics Research Communities Session) 8:00 am–12:00 pm Stochastic Spatial Models, I (a Mathematics Research Communities Session) 8:00 am–12:00 pm Explicit Methods in Arithmetic Geometry in Characteristic p, I (a Mathematics Research Communities Session) 8:00 am–12:00 pm Pedagogical Innovations That Lead to Successful Mathematics 8:00 am–12:00 pm Computational and Categorical Methods in Homotopy Theory, I 8:00 am–12:00 pm Recent Advances in Function and Operator Theory, I 8:00 am–12:00 pm Mathematical Programming and Combinatorial Optimization 8:00 am–12:00 pm Current Areas of Interest in the Mathematical Sciences of Medieval Islam 8:00 am–12:00 pm Modeling Natural Resources, I 8:00 am–12:00 pm Topological Measures of Complexity: Inverse Limits, Entropy, and Structure of Attractors, I 8:00 am–12:00 pm Mathematical Physics, Some Open Problems for the 21st Century, I 8:00 am–12:00 pm Utilizing Mathematical Models to Understand Tumor Heterogeneity and Drug Resistance 8:00 am–12:00 pm Matrices and Graphs, I 8:00 am–12:00 pm Differential Geometry and Global Analysis, I, Honoring the Memory of Tadashi Nagano (1930- 2017) 8:00 am–12:00 pm Extremal and Probabilistic Combinatorics, I 8:00 am–12:00 pm Algorithms, Experimentation, and Applications in Number Theory, I 8:00 am–12:00 pm Analytic Theory of Automorphic Forms and L-Functions, I

1578 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020

8:00 am–12:00 pm Harmonic Analysis, I MAA Invited Paper Sessions 8:00–10:50 am Trends in Mathematical and Computational Biology 8:00 am–12:00 pm AMS Contributed Paper Sessions 8:00 am–12:00 pm MAA General Contributed Paper Sessions 8:00–11:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Developments, Directions, and Experiences in Open Educational Resources, I 8:00–11:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Mathematical Experiences and Projects in Business, Industry, and Government (BIG) 8:00–11:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Recreational Mathematics: Puzzles, Card Tricks, Games, and Gambling, I 8:00–11:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Re-Envisioning the Calculus Sequence 8:00–11:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Incorporating Realistic Applications of Mathematics Through Interdisciplinary Collaborations 8:00–11:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Tell Me a Story: Connections between Mathematics and Performed or Print Narrative 8:00–11:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education (RUME), I 8:00–11:00 am SIAM Minisymposium on Preparing faculty to prepare students for tomorrow’s workforce 8:00 am–5:30 pm Employment Center 9:00–9:50 am MAA Invited Address Prospering Through Mathematics. Della Dumbaugh 9:00–11:00 am MAA Minicourse #10: Part A Wall to Wall Modeling Scenarios for Differential Equations 9:00–11:00 am MAA Minicourse #6: Part A IBL SIGMAA Minicourse: Introduction to Inquiry-Based Learning 9:00–11:00 am MAA Minicourse #7: Part A A Short Road to the Modern Theory of Integration 9:00–10:20 am MAA Panel Session for Chairs Topic: Equity, Diversity, Inclusion in the Mathematics Classroom 9:00–10:20 am MAA Panel So You Want to Start an Undergraduate Statistics or Data Science Program? 9:00–10:20 am MAA Workshop Generating Ideas of Undergraduate Research Projects 9:00–10:30 am AMS-MAA Panel Discussion on Looking for teaching oriented positions A panel for graduate students and postdocs 9:30 am–5:30 pm Exhibits and Book Sales 10:00 am–12:00 pm Estimathon! A mindbending mixture of math and trivia 10:05–10:55 am AWM-AMS Noether Lecture Branching Laws for Representations of Non Compact Orthogonal Groups. Birgit Speh 10:30 am–12:00 pm AMS-MAA Panel Discussion: Preparing your graduate students for teaching oriented positions A panel for PhD granting departments and faculty 10:35–11:55 am MAA Workshop Identifying and Managing Microaggressions in the Academic Setting 11:10 am–12:00 pm MAA Project NExT Lecture on Teaching and Learning Todxs Cuentan: Difference, humanity, and belonging in the mathematics classroom. Federico Ardila 11:10 am–12:00 pm SIAM Invited Address The Mathematics of Life: Making Diffusion your Friend? James Keener

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1579 JMM 2020

1:00–1:50 pm AMS Colloquium Lectures: Lecture II Mathematical frameworks for signal and image analysis. Lecture 2: Diffusion methods in manifold and fibre bundle learning. Ingrid Daubechies AMS Special Sessions 1:00–4:00 pm Choiceless Set Theory and Related Areas, II (AMS-ASL) 1:00–4:00 pm Rational Points on Algebraic Varieties: Theory and Computation, III (Associated with AMS Invited Address Anthony Várilly-Alvarado) 1:00–4:00 pm Outreach Strategies for Reaching Underrepresented Students at the Pre-College Level, II 1:00–4:00 pm Analytic and Probabilistic Combinatorics, II 1:00–4:00 pm Geometric Representation Theory and Equivariant Elliptic Cohomology, II (a Mathematics Research Communities Session) 1:00–4:00 pm Stochastic Spatial Models, II (a Mathematics Research Communities Session) 1:00–4:00 pm Explicit Methods in Arithmetic Geometry in Characteristic p, II (a Mathematics Research Communities Session) 1:00–4:00 pm Computational and Categorical Methods in Homotopy Theory, II 1:00–4:00 pm Recent Advances in Function and Operator Theory, II 1:00–4:00 pm Modeling Natural Resources, II 1:00–4:00 pm C*-Algebras, Dynamical Systems and Applications, I 1:00–4:00 pm Topological Measures of Complexity: Inverse Limits, Entropy, and Structure of Attractors, II 1:00–4:00 pm Iterative Methods for Large-Scale Data Analysis, II 1:00–4:00 pm Commutative Algebra, I 1:00–4:00 pm Mathematical Physics, Some Open Problems for the 21st Century, II 1:00–4:00 pm Highly Accurate and Structure-Preserving Numerical Methods for Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations, I 1:00–4:00 pm Matrices and Graphs, II 1:00–4:00 pm Differential Geometry and Global Analysis, II, Honoring the Memory of Tadashi Nagano (1930- 2017) 1:00–4:00 pm Hamiltonian Systems, II 1:00–4:00 pm Extremal and Probabilistic Combinatorics, II 1:00–4:00 pm Algorithms, Experimentation, and Applications in Number Theory, II 1:00–4:00 pm Analytic Theory of Automorphic Forms and L-Functions, II 1:00–4:00 pm Harmonic Analysis, II MAA Invited Paper Sessions 1:00–3:50 pm COMAP Modeling Contests 1:00–3:00 pm MAA Minicourse #8: Part A Stats for Data Science 1:00–4:10 pm AMS Contributed Paper Sessions 1:00–4:10 pm MAA General Contributed Paper Sessions 1:00–4:15 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on Recreational Mathematics: Puzzles, Card Tricks, Games, and Gambling, II 1:00–4:15 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on Innovations in Complex Analysis 1:00–4:15 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on Abstract Algebra: Teaching, Topics, and Techniques

1580 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020

1:00–4:15 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on The EDGE (Enhancing Diversity in Graduate Education) program: Pure and Applied talks by Women Math Warriors 1:00–4:15 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education (RUME), II 1:00–4:10 pm SIAM Minisymposium on Mathematical modeling and simulation of complex biological systems 1:00–2:30 pm AMS Committee on Education Panel Next Steps: Mathematics Departments and the Explosive Growth of Computational and Quantitative Offerings in Higher Education 1:00–2:20 pm MAA Panel So You’re (Going to Be) a Postdoc: Now What? A Panel Discussion on a Fulfilling Postdoc Experience 1:00–2:20 pm MAA Panel International Engagement in Research and Education in Mathematical Sciences in Africa 1:00–3:00 pm Summer Program for Women in Mathematics (SPWM) Reunion 1:15–4:15 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on Developments, Directions, and Experiences in Open Educational Resources, II 2:00–4:00 pm MAA Poster Session: Projects Supported by the NSF Division of Undergraduate Education 2:15–3:05 pm AMS Maryam Mirzakhani Lecture Differential Operators and the Geometry of Domains in Euclidean Space. Tatiana Toro 2:35–3:55 pm MAA Panel How to Write Op-eds for Newspapers: Shaping Public Thinking on Math 2:35–3:55 pm MAA Panel Strengthening Undergraduate Research Through Community Building 2:35–3:55 pm MAA Workshop A Classroom Experience with Inquiry-Based Learning 3:20–4:10 pm AMS Retiring Presidential Address A 2020 View of Fermat’s Last Theorem. Kenneth A. Ribet 4:25–5:25 pm Joint Prize Session 5:30–7:30 pm Association of Christians in the Mathematical Sciences Reception and Lecture 5:30–6:30 pm Budapest Semesters in Mathematics Annual Alumni Reunion 5:30–7:30 pm Penn State’s Eberly College of Science and Department of Mathematics Reception 5:30–7:30 pm University of California, San Diego, Department of Mathematics Reception 5:30–7:00 pm University of Michigan Mathematics Alumni and Friends Reception 6:00–8:00 pm SIGMAA on Mathematical and Computational Biology (BIO SIGMAA) Business Meeting, Reception, and Guest Speaker 6:00–8:00 pm SIGMAA on Quantitative Literacy (SIGMAA QL) Business Meeting, Reception, and Guest Speaker 6:00–7:30 pm SIGMAA on Undergraduate Research (SIGMAA UR) Business Meeting, Reception, and Guest Speaker 6:00–7:30 pm Association for Women in Mathematics Reception and Awards Presentation 6:00–7:00 pm University of Chicago Mathematics Alumni Reception 6:00–8:00 pm Spectra Reception for LGBT Mathematicians 6:00–8:00 pm NSA’s Women in Mathematics Society Networking Session 6:00–8:00 pm University of Waterloo Faculty of Mathematics Reception 6:30–8:00 pm MSRI Reception for Current and Future Donors

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1581 JMM 2020

6:30–8:30 pm PROMYS and Ross Reception for Alumni and Friends 8:15–9:45 pm Knitting Circle Bring a project (knitting/crochet/tatting/beading/etc.) and chat with other mathematical crafters.

Friday, January 17 7:17–9:00 am YP17 HCSSiM Reunion Breakfast 7:30 am–4:00 pm Joint Meetings Registration 7:30 am–8:00 pm Email Center AMS Special Sessions 8:00–11:00 am Research in Mathematics by Undergraduates and Students in Post-Baccalaureate Programs, III (AMS-MAA-SIAM) 8:00–11:00 am Getting Started in Undergraduate Research: Topics, Tools and Open Problems, I (AMS-MAA) 8:00–11:00 am Representation Theory Inspired by the Langlands Conjectures, I (Associated with Joint AWM-AMS Noether Lecture Birgit Speh) (AMS-AWM) 8:00–11:00 am Markov Models and Matrix Properties, I 8:00–11:00 am Mathematical Analysis in Data Science, II (Associated with AMS Colloquium Lectures Ingrid Daubechies) 8:00–11:00 am Advances in Multivariable Operator Theory: Connections with Algebraic Geometry, Free Analysis, and Free Probability, I 8:00–11:00 am Geometry of Differential Equations, I 8:00–11:00 am C*-Algebras, Dynamical Systems and Applications, II 8:00–11:00 am Applied Topology, I 8:00–11:00 am Stochastic Analysis and Applications in Finance, Actuarial Science and Related Fields, I 8:00–11:00 am Commutative Algebra, II 8:00–11:00 am Research in Mathematics by Early Career Graduate Students, I 8:00–11:00 am Interfaces Between PDEs and Geometric Measure Theory, I (Associated with AMS Maryam Mirzakhani Invited Address Tatiana Toro) 8:00–11:00 am Applications and Computations in Knot Theory, I 8:00–11:00 am Highly Accurate and Structure-Preserving Numerical Methods for Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations, II 8:00–11:00 am Arithmetic Dynamics, I (Associated with AMS Retiring Presidential Address Kenneth A. Ribet) 8:00–11:00 am Advances in Operator Algebras, I 8:00–11:00 am Interactions between Combinatorics, Representation Theory, and Coding Theory, I 8:00–11:00 am Mathematical Information in the Digital Age of Science, I 8:00–11:00 am Aspects and Applications of Algebraic Combinatorics, I 8:00–11:00 am Groups and Topological Dynamics, I 8:00–11:00 am Random Combinatorial Structures, Complex Analysis and Integrable Systems, I 8:00–11:00 am Mean Field Games: Theory and Applications, I MAA Invited Paper Sessions 8:00–10:20 am Can Mathematics Help Us Trust Our Elections Again?

1582 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020

8:00–10:55 am AMS Contributed Paper Sessions 8:00–10:55 am MAA General Contributed Paper Sessions 8:00–10:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Fostering Creativity in Undergraduate Mathematics Courses, I 8:00–10:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Mathematics and Sports, I 8:00–10:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Making Business Calculus Relevant 8:00–10:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Combining Technological Tools and Innovative Practices to Improve Student Learning Outcomes 8:00–10:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on A History of Mathematics in the United States and Canada: A session in Honor of Math Historian David Zitarelli 8:00–10:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Quantitative Literacy and Social Justice: An Ongoing Dialogue 8:00–10:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Data Across the Curriculum 8:00–10:55 am SIAM Minisymposium on Derivative free optimization for high-dimensional problems 8:00 am–5:30 pm Employment Center 8:30–10:30 am AMS-MAA Grad School Fair Undergrads! Take this opportunity to meet representatives from mathematical science graduate programs. 9:00–9:50 am MAA Invited Address Instruction and Resources in Post-secondary Mathematics: How their Interplay Shape what We Do in the Classroom. Vilma Mesa 9:00–9:50 am ASL Invited Address 9:00–11:00 am MAA Minicourse #1: Part B Using Automated Software to Learn and Teach Numerical Solution of Partial Differential Equations 9:00–11:00 am MAA Minicourse #2: Part B Teaching Reproducible Statistics with R and R Studio 9:00–11:00 am MAA Minicourse #3: Part B Creating and Adapting OER Textbooks Using the LibreTexts Platform 9:30 am–5:30 pm Exhibits and Book Sales 10:05–10:55 am AMS Invited Address Biomedical Data Sharing and Analysis at Scale. Bonnie Berger 10:30–11:00 am Radical Dash Prize Session 11:10 am–12:00 pm AMS-MAA Invited Address Uncovering Lottery Shenanigans. Skip Garibaldi 12:00–1:00 pm MAA Student Poster Session Judge’s Orientation 12:00–1:00 pm Budapest Semesters in Mathematics Education Informational Session 1:00–1:50 pm AMS Colloquium Lectures: Lecture III Mathematical frameworks for signal and image analysis. Lecture 3: Adaptive time-frequency methods. Ingrid Daubechies 1:00–1:50 pm MAA Lecture for Students On the scales of one to infinity: Learning to listen to your mathematics. Ami Radunskaya 1:00–4:45 pm Current Events Bulletin AMS Special Sessions 1:00–6:00 pm History of Mathematics, I (AMS-MAA) 1:00–6:00 pm Getting Started in Undergraduate Research: Topics, Tools and Open Problems, II (AMS-MAA) 1:00–6:00 pm Mathematical and Computational Research in Data Science, I (AMS-AWM) 1:00–6:00 pm Representation Theory Inspired by the Langlands Conjectures, II (Associated with Joint AWM-AMS Noether Lecture Birgit Speh) (AMS-AWM)

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1583 JMM 2020

1:00–6:00 pm Recent Trends in Semigroup Theory, I 1:00–6:00 pm Markov Models and Matrix Properties, II 1:00–6:00 pm Advances in Multivariable Operator Theory: Connections with Algebraic Geometry, Free Analysis, and Free Probability, II 1:00–6:00 pm The Kaczmarz Algorithm with Applications in Harmonic Analysis and Data Science 1:00–6:00 pm Geometry of Differential Equations, II 1:00–6:00 pm Applied Topology, II 1:00–6:00 pm Stochastic Analysis and Applications in Finance, Actuarial Science and Related Fields, II 1:00–6:00 pm Commutative Algebra, III 1:00–6:00 pm Research in Mathematics by Early Career Graduate Students, II 1:00–6:00 pm Interfaces Between PDEs and Geometric Measure Theory, II (Associated with AMS Maryam Mirzakhani Invited Address Tatiana Toro) 1:00–6:00 pm Novel Teaching Practices in Mathematics, I 1:00–6:00 pm Quantum Theory of Matter Meets Noncommutative Geometry and Topology, I 1:00–6:00 pm Arithmetic Dynamics, II (Associated with AMS Retiring Presidential Address Kenneth A. Ribet) 1:00–6:00 pm Advances in Operator Algebras, II 1:00–6:00 pm Interactions between Combinatorics, Representation Theory, and Coding Theory, I 1:00–6:00 pm Aspects and Applications of Algebraic Combinatorics, II 1:00–6:00 pm Groups and Topological Dynamics, II 1:00–6:00 pm Random Combinatorial Structures, Complex Analysis and Integrable Systems, II 1:00–6:00 pm Mean Field Games: Theory and Applications, II MAA Invited Paper Sessions 1:00–3:50 pm Experiencing Geometric Transformations and Evaluating Learning Progressions: Celebrating the Work of David W. Henderson 1:00–3:00 pm MAA Minicourse #4: Part B Visualizing Multivariable Calculus & Differential Equations Using CalcPlot3D 1:00–3:00 pm MAA Minicourse #5: Part B Visual Complex Analysis- GeoGebra Tools and Mapping Diagrams 1:00–3:00 pm MAA Minicourse #9: Part B Combining Mathematical and Computational Thinking in a General Education Math Course 1:00–6:00 pm AMS Contributed Paper Sessions 1:00–6:00 pm MAA General Contributed Paper Sessions 1:00–4:55 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on Scholarship on Teaching and Learning Statistics 1:00–4:55 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on Fostering Creativity in Undergraduate Mathematics Courses, II 1:00–4:55 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on Mathematics and Sports, II 1:00–4:55 pm MAA Contributed Paper Session on Innovative and Effective Ways to Teach Linear Algebra 1:00–6:00 pm SIAM Minisymposium on Mathematics at the National Laboratories 1:00–4:30 pm NAM Haynes-Granville-Browne Session of Presentations by Recent Doctoral Recipients 2:00–2:50 pm ASL Invited Address

1584 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020

2:00–3:30 pm AMS Directors of Graduate Studies 2:15–4:00 pm Rocky Mountain Mathematics Consortium Board of Directors Meeting 2:30–4:00 pm AMS Committee on Science Policy A Call to Action–Grassroots Advocacy for Our Profession 2:30–3:45 pm Presentations by MAA Teaching Award Recipients 3:00–4:00 pm A Town Hall with the AMS Executive Director about the Future of the Joint Mathematics Meetings 4:30–6:00 pm MAA Student Poster Session 4:30–6:30 pm AMS Congressional Fellowship Session 5:00–6:15 pm AWM Workshop: Poster Presentations by Women Graduate Students and Reception 5:00–7:00 pm MAA Panel 2020 Vision for Actuarial Science Education 5:30–6:00 pm SIGMAA on the Philosophy of Mathematics (POM SIGMAA) Reception 5:30–7:30 pm University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Department of Mathematics Reception 5:30–6:00 pm SIGMAA on Mathematics Instruction Using the Web (WEB SIGMAA) Reception 6:00–6:15 pm SIGMAA on the Philosophy of Mathematics (POM SIGMAA) Business Meeting 6:00–6:30 pm SIGMAA on Statistics Education (SIGMAA StatEd) Reception 6:00–7:00 pm SIGMAA on Mathematics Instruction Using the Web (WEB SIGMAA) Guest Speaker 6:00–7:00 pm Mathematically Bent Theater Performed by Colin Adams and the Mobiusbandaid Players 6:00–7:00 pm AMS Mathematical Reviews Reception 6:00–8:40 pm NAM Reception and Banquet 6:00–8:00 pm Texas A & M University Mathematics Department Alumni, Student, and Faculty Reception 6:15–7:15 pm SIGMAA on the Philosophy of Mathematics (POM SIGMAA) Guest Lecture 6:30–7:15 pm SIGMAA on Statistics Education (SIGMAA StatEd) Business Meeting 7:00–8:30 pm MAA Special Presentation: An Evening of Poetry 7:00–8:30 pm SCUDEM Gathering and Reunion 7:20–8:20 pm SIGMAA on Statistics Education (SIGMAA StatEd) Guest Speaker 7:45–8:35 pm NAM Cox-Talbot Address Title to be announced 8:00–10:00 pm Backgammon! Learn to play backgammon from expert players. 8:00 pm ICERM Mixer 8:00–10:00 pm Project NExT Reception All Project NExT Fellows, consultants, and other friends of Project NExT are invited.

Saturday, January 18 7:30 am–1:00 pm Joint Meetings Registration 7:30 am–1:00 pm Email Center AMS Special Sessions 8:00 am–12:00 pm Research in Mathematics by Undergraduates and Students in Post-Baccalaureate Programs, IV (AMS-MAA-SIAM)

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1585 JMM 2020

8:00 am–12:00 pm History of Mathematics, II (AMS-MAA) 8:00 am–12:00 pm Mathematical and Computational Research in Data Science, II (AMS-AWM) 8:00 am–12:00 pm Research from the Rocky Mountain-Great Plains Graduate Research Workshop in Combinatorics, I 8:00 am–12:00 pm Algebraic Cycles in Arithmetic and Geometry 8:00 am–12:00 pm Riemannian Foliations and Applications 8:00 am–12:00 pm Differential and Difference Equations in Biological Dynamics 8:00 am–12:00 pm Evolution 8:00 am–12:00 pm Representations of Finite Groups and Related Structures, I 8:00 am–12:00 pm Interfaces Between PDEs and Geometric Measure Theory, III (Associated with AMS Maryam Mirzakhani Invited Address Tatiana Toro) 8:00 am–12:00 pm Fractal Geometry, Dynamical Systems, and Applications, I 8:00 am–12:00 pm Random Matrices and Integrable Systems, I 8:00 am–12:00 pm Computational Biomedicine 8:00 am–12:00 pm Applications and Computations in Knot Theory, II 8:00 am–12:00 pm Quantum Theory of Matter Meets Noncommutative Geometry and Topology, II 8:00 am–12:00 pm Arithmetic Dynamics, III (Associated with AMS Retiring Presidential Address Kenneth A. Ribet) 8:00 am–12:00 pm Mathematical Aspects of Conformal Field Theory, I 8:00 am–12:00 pm Partition Theory and q-Series 8:00 am–12:00 pm Set-Valued and Fuzzy-Valued Analysis with Applications 8:00 am–12:00 pm Mathematical Information in the Digital Age of Science, II 8:00 am–12:00 pm Recent Advances in Time-Stepping Methods for Ocean Modeling 8:00 am–12:00 pm Wall to Wall Modeling Activities in Differential Equations Courses 8:00 am–12:00 pm The Mathematics of Social Justice MAA Invited Paper Sessions 8:00–10:50 am Modernizing the Introductory Statistics Course 8:00 am–12:00 pm AMS Contributed Paper Sessions 8:00 am–12:00 pm MAA General Contributed Paper Sessions 8:00–11:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Role of Explanation in Mathematical Proofs 8:00–11:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Mathematics and the Life Sciences: Initiatives, Programs, Curricula 8:00–11:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on The Teaching and Learning of Undergraduate Ordinary Differential Equations 8:00–11:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Effective Assessment Practices in Large-enrollment Classes or Non-traditional Classrooms 8:00–11:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Inclusive Excellence for the Mathematical Sciences 8:00–11:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on The Mathematical Knowledge of Teachers as an Integrated Application in Core Mathematics Courses 8:00–11:55 am MAA Contributed Paper Session on Active Learning in Introductory Courses: Insights from Math Departments in the Process of Change

1586 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020

8:00 am–4:50 pm AWM Workshop: Women in Several Complex Variables (WinSCV) 8:00–9:20 am MAA Townhall Swap Session for Teaching Aligned with the Instructional Practices Guide 9:00–9:50 am AMS Invited Address Smooth Invariants of Four-Dimensional Manifolds and Quantum Field Theory. Gregory W. Moore 9:00–9:50 am ASL Invited Address 9:00–11:00 am MAA Minicourse #10: Part B Wall to Wall Modeling Scenarios for Differential Equations 9:00–11:00 am MAA Minicourse #6: Part B IBL SIGMAA Minicourse: Introduction to Inquiry-Based Learning 9:00–11:00 am MAA Minicourse #7: Part B A Short Road to the Modern Theory of Integration 9:00–10:15 am MAA Mathematical Competition in Modeling (MCM) Winners 9:00–10:20 am MAA Panel Supporting Transgender and Non-binary Students 9:00–9:50 am NAM Panel Discussion 9:00 am–12:00 pm Exhibits and Book Sales 10:00–10:50 am ASL Invited Address 10:00–10:50 am NAM Business Meeting 10:05–10:55 am MAA Invited Address Two Research Projects Birthed from Curiosity, Recreation, and Joy. aBa Mbirika 11:10–11:40 am MAA Business Meeting 12:15–12:45 pm AMS Business Meeting 1:00–1:50 pm NAM Claytor-Woodard Lecture A Numerical and Analytical Study of Dynamic Materials. Suzanne Weekes 1:00–1:50 pm ASL Invited Address AMS Special Sessions 1:00–6:00 pm History of Mathematics, III (AMS-MAA) 1:00–6:00 pm Representation Theory Inspired by the Langlands Conjectures, III (Associated with Joint AWM-AMS Noether Lecture Birgit Speh) (AMS-AWM) 1:00–6:00 pm Women in Topology (AMS-AWM) 1:00–6:00 pm Research from the Rocky Mountain-Great Plains Graduate Research Workshop in Combinatorics, II 1:00–6:00 pm Representations of Finite Groups and Related Structures, II 1:00–6:00 pm Arithmetic Galois Actions 1:00–6:00 pm The Geometry of Complex Polynomials and Rational Functions 1:00–6:00 pm Fractal Geometry, Dynamical Systems, and Applications, II 1:00–6:00 pm Random Matrices and Integrable Systems, II 1:00–6:00 pm Recent Advances of Mathematical Modeling on Ecology and Epidemiology 1:00–6:00 pm Future Directions in Theory & Applications of Nonlinear Reaction-Diffusion Equations 1:00–6:00 pm From STEM to STEAMS (Science, Technology, Engineering, AI, Mathematics, Statistics) 1:00–6:00 pm Quantum Theory of Matter Meets Noncommutative Geometry and Topology, III 1:00–6:00 pm Vietoris-Borsuk-Rips Homotopy 1:00–6:00 pm International Research Experience for Students (IRES) 1:00–6:00 pm Mathematical Aspects of Conformal Field Theory, II

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1587 JMM 2020

1:00–6:00 pm Stochastic Differential Equations and Application of Mathematical Biology 1:00–6:00 pm Experimental and Computer Assisted Mathematics 1:00–6:00 pm Mathematics and Motherhood 1:00–6:00 pm Self-Distributive Structures, Knot Theory, and the Yang-Baxter Equation 1:00–6:00 pm Analysis of Nonlocal Models 1:00–6:00 pm Algorithms, Analysis, and Applications of Numerical PDEs 1:00–6:00 pm Analysis and Differential Equations at Undergraduate Institutions 1:00–3:00 pm MAA Minicourse #8: Part B Stats for Data Science 1:00–5:55 pm AMS Contributed Paper Sessions 1:00–5:55 pm MAA General Contributed Paper Sessions 1:00–5:30 pm SIAM Minisymposium on Deterministic and probabilistic approaches for nonlinear PDEs 1:00–2:45 pm AMS Special Presentation Who Wants to Be a Mathematician—Championship Contest 1:00–3:00 pm Julia Robinson Mathematics Festival 3:00–3:50 pm MAA-AMS-SIAM Gerald and Judith Porter Public Lecture The Fantastic Intersection of Math and Sports: Where No One is Afraid of a Decimal Point. Rajiv Maheswaran 6:00–9:30 pm AMS Social at JMM 2020: Mathematicians in the Performing Arts

Photos by Kate Awtrey, Atlanta Convention Photography

We are AMS Members! Our second “AMS Day” will be held on Wednesday, October 16, 2019. Join us as we honor our AMS members via a day of specials on AMS publications, membership, and more! Spread the word about #AMSDay today!

1588 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020

AMS Short Course Mean Field Games: From Agent Based Models to Nash Equilibria

Hyatt Regency at the Colorado Convention Center Denver, CO January 13–14, 2020

ics being possibly stochastic; also, the agents themselves are required to interact with one another through their collective distribution; such a form of interaction has 3 been intensively used in statistical physics and is usually referred to as being of mean field type. Typical questions in 2 mean field games address the characterization of the Nash equilibria together with their existence and uniqueness 1 whenever the population consists of a continuum of play- ers and is thus infinite. In this regard, properly justifying 0 the passage from games with a large but finite number of players to games with a continuum of players is a difficult question, on which recent progress has been made. The 2020 AMS Short Course is organized by François Since its introduction, the subject has been growing Delarue, University of Nice Sophia Antipolis. The speak- rapidly from both the theoretical and applied sides. Part ers include Christy Graves, Princeton University; Daniel of the success comes from the fact that the theory appeals Lacker, Columbia University; Mathieu Laurière, Princeton to several different topics in mathematics, including par- University; Roland Malhamé, Polytechnique Montréal; tial differential equations, control theory, game theory, Kavita Ramanan, Brown University; and Ronnie Sircar, probability, and optimal transportation. Another key fact Princeton University. for explaining the interest in mean field games is the wide The mathematical theory of mean field games goes spectrum of applications that the theory offers: While the back to the pioneering works of Lasry and Lions on the subject is originally motivated by work in economics, it one hand, and of Caines, Huang, and Malhamé on the is now used for modeling many other practical phenom- other. Publications from these two groups appeared inde- ena such as crowd motion, flocking of animals, financial markets, energy markets, security of cyber networks, etc. pendently more than ten years ago. Generally speaking, Generally speaking, it comes as a complement to agent the purpose of mean field game theory is to address Nash based models. equilibria within large populations of rational (non-co- The purpose of the course is to offer insight into the operative) agents featuring sufficiently many symmetries. theory and its applications for an audience comprising Among others, the states of the agents depend on a time- non-specialists and early-career specialists. The two days dependent controlled parameter, the underpinning dynam- will contain a series of six lectures, including one intro- For permission to reprint this article, please contact: reprint- ductory lecture, three lectures on the theory, one on the [email protected]. applications to economics, and one on the numerical as-

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1589 JMM 2020 pects. The most theoretical lectures will be complemented to read as the analogue of the so-called Nash system in with exercise sessions. The lecture on the numerical aspects game theory, but for a continuum of players. This equation will include a demo session. Familiarity with PDEs, control was originally used by J. M. Lasry and P. L. Lions to address theory, or probability theory may be useful. mean field games when players in the game are all subjected to the same noise, which is then said to be “a common Lecture Topics noise.” In short, the equation provides an Eulerian point The Nash certainty equivalence of view on the game. and applications The purpose of the lecture is not only to present the Roland Malhamé and Christy Graves equation and the related solvability results, but also to ex- pose the basic tools that are needed to understand it. These Roland Malhamé is a professor at include differential calculus on the space of probability the Polytechnique Montréal. He is measures and the uniqueness criterion due to J. M. Lasry one of the co-founders of the theory and P. L. Lions, the latter writing as a monotonicity con- of mean field games. He published, dition on the cost functional with respect to the measure together with his co-authors Peter argument. The lecture will end with an exercise session. Caines and Minyi Huang, earlier Roland Malhamé articles on the so-called “Nash cer- tainty equivalence,” which is another The convergence problem name for “mean field games.” Christy Daniel Lacker Graves earned her PhD under the Daniel Lacker is an assistant profes- supervision of René Carmona and sor at Columbia University. He has has written several contributions on been working on the probabilistic the subject. approach to mean field games since In this introductory lecture, Ro- completing his PhD. Along with land Malhamé will address the roots others, he showed how the notion of the theory starting from motiva- of relaxed controls was useful both tions in engineering and addressing Daniel Lacker to solve mean field games with high- Christy Graves the so-called linear quadratic setting. level complexity (like mean field He will explain how solutions to games with a common noise) and to prove the convergence mean field games may be tackled in the form of a fixed of the solutions to games with finitely many players to point argument over the flow of marginal distributions of mean field games, the latter being precisely referred to as a stochastic control problem. This approach can serve to “the convergence problem in mean field games.” construct approximate decentralized Nash equilibria to The convergence problem is known to be a difficult games with finitely many players. Roland Malhamé will question in the field. The purpose of the lecture is to review also explain the connection with cooperative games with a the notion of “propagation of chaos,” which is at the core continuum of players. After the lecture, Christy Graves will of the whole theory, and to discuss two main strategies for organize an exercise session on linear quadratic mean field addressing the problem: first, to use the master equation, games, as the latter are especially convenient for pedagog- whenever it has a smooth solution; second, to use com- ical purposes. This exercise session should be very helpful pactness arguments and related notions of relaxed controls for neophytes. in stochastic control theory. The lecture will end with an exercise session. The master equation François Delarue Deviations and fluctuations for mean field games Kavita Ramanan François Delarue is a professor at Université Nice Sophia Antipolis. He Kavita Ramanan is a professor at Brown University. She has been working on the probabi- is an expert in large deviation principles, which are used listic approach to mean field games to study rare events in probability theory. She has been for several years. Together with René working on mean field games for several years, including Carmona, he wrote a two-volume some recent works on deviations and fluctuations in the book on the subject, which was pub- convergence problem. François Delarue lished in 2018. Deviations and fluctuations in the convergence problem The purpose of this lecture is to introduce the master provide more precise pictures on the passage from games equation, which is a partial differential equation defined with finitely many players to mean field games. In this on the space of probability measures and which turns out regard, deviations and fluctuations are complementary:

1590 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020

Fluctuations are usually manifested in the form of a central games in energy markets and especially in the analysis of limit theorem that tells the typical size of the fluctuations of the competition between producers. the in-equilibrium collective state (seen as an empirical dis- The lecture will conclude with an open discussion on tribution) of the finite game around the asymptotic regime the new applications of mean field games and the related given by the solution to the mean field game. In contrast, emerging trends. large deviations are used to describe large (exceptional) deviations of the former empirical distribution away from Registration the latter mean field game equilibrium. The strategy makes This Short Course will take place on January 13–14, 2020, extensive use of the master equation and exemplifies the the Monday and Tuesday before the Joint Mathematics fact that the latter, when it has a classical solution, becomes Meetings (JMM). Registration is done using the same a very efficient tool in the analysis of the convergence prob- form and process as for the Joint Mathematics Meetings. lem. The lecture will end with an exercise session. However, it is not necessary to register for the JMM to participate in the Short Course. The registration fees for Numerical methods the Short Course are US$151 for AMS members; US$232 Mathieu Laurière for nonmembers; and US$84 for students/unemployed or emeritus members. These fees are in effect until Decem- Mathieu Laurière is a post-doctoral ber 26, 2019. If you choose to register on-site, the fees are student at Princeton. He earned his US$185 for AMS members; US$275 for nonmembers; and PhD in Paris, France, under the su- US$105 for students/unemployed or emeritus members. pervision of Yves Achdou, who is one Advanced registration starts on September 9, 2019. of the top experts in deterministic On-site registration will take place on Monday, January numerical methods for mean field 13, 2020, at the Hyatt Regency Denver at the Colorado games. Together with Y. Achdou, Convention Center, exact location to be determined. Mathieu Laurière Mathieu Laurière worked on the numerical aspect of the field, using Credits the PDE formulation of mean field games and related Photo of Roland Malhamé is courtesy of HEC Montréal. variational methods. Photo of Christy Graves is courtesy of Christy Graves. The need for efficient numerical methods is due to the Photo of Mathieu Laurière is courtesy of Lauren Coleman. fact that mean field games admit explicit solutions only in very special cases, such as linear quadratic models. For many applications, numerical methods are hence a fun- damental tool for getting insights into the shape of the solutions and obtaining quantitative results. In this lecture, Mathieu Laurière will mostly focus on two families of numerical methods. The first one is based on a fixed point approach, which is inherent to the definition of Nash equilibrium. The second one is based on the vari- ational structure exhibited by many mean field games. The latter family of methods can, more generally, be applied to solve cooperative problems. Several numerical illustrations (including models for congestion effects in crowd motion) will be provided.

Application of mean field games in economy Ronnie Sircar Ronnie Sircar is a professor at Princeton University. He is an expert in mathematical finance, and he has been working on the applications of mean field games to economics and finance for several years. Applications of the mean field game theory to economy and finance are numerous. To wit, earlier forms of mean field games appeared in economics before the theory was formalized from the mathematical point of view. In his lecture, Ronnie Sircar will address the use of mean field

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1591 JMM 2020

AMS Employment Center Colorado Convention Center, Denver, Colorado January 15–17, 2020

The Employment Center offers a convenient, safe, and practical meeting place for employers and jobseekers attending the Joint Meetings. The focus of the Employment Center is on PhD-level mathematical scientists and those that seek to hire them from academia, business, and government.

Employment Center Web Services Employment Center registration information should be accessed through the MathJobs.org system. The website and all information will be available beginning in early September 2019 and will remain accessible through Jan- uary 17, 2020 (the last day of the Employment Center). While some schools may delay appointment-setting until late December 2019, virtually all scheduling will be done before any Joint Mathematics Meetings (JMM) travel takes place, so applicants should expect few or no additional appointments to be available after arrival. Registering on- site, for applicants, serves no real purpose. No Admittance Without a JMM Badge All applicants and employers planning to enter the Em- ployment Center—even just for one interview—must present a 2020 Joint Meetings registration badge. Meeting badges are obtained by registering for the JMM and pay- ing a meeting registration fee. The advanced registration deadline is December 26, 2019. See the JMM website at

2020 Employment Center Schedule December 26, 2019 is the deadline for table registration. After this date, only “One Day Tables” will be available for purchase. This is also the deadline to register for the JMM badge, needed for admittance to the EC, at advanced regis- tration prices. Hours of Operation (Please note there is no access to the EC prior to the opening times listed): Wednesday, January 15, 2020—8:00 am–5:30 pm Thursday, January 16, 2020—8:00 am–5:30 pm Friday, January 17, 2020—8:00 am–5:30 pm Location: Mile High Ballroom 1, 2, 3, Colorado Convention Center, Denver, Colorado. Do not schedule an interview to begin until 15 minutes after opening.

1592 Notices of the American Mathematical Society Volume 66, Number 9 JMM 2020 jointmathematicsmeetings.org/jmm for registration post a job using the NewJob link or attach an existing instructions and rates. job to your table. •• Each person who will need to enter the Employment Employers: Choose a Table Center area must have a meeting badge (obtained by There are three table types available for employers, based registering for the JMM and paying a meeting registra- on the number of interviewers who will be present at any tion fee). given time: To display an ad on-site, and use no Employment Cen- •• One or two interviewers per table in the “Quiet Area”: ter services at all, submit your one-page paper ad to the US$360, each additional table US$205. Employment Center staff on-site in Denver. There is no •• Three to six interviewers per table in the “Committee fee for this service. Table” area: US$450, each additional table US$225. For complete information, visit https://www.ams •• Free electricity is supplied to every table with purchase .org/emp-reg. of the table. •• “One Day Tables” allow for on-site interviewing for one Applicants: Making the Decision to Attend day without placing an ad. These tables, which can ac- •• Past attendees have pointed out that all interviews are commodate up to three interviewers, may be purchased arranged in advance, and there is no opportunity to through January 17, 2020. The fee is US$200. Please make connections on-site if it has not happened before register online at https://www.mathjobs.org and the meeting. choose the “EC-One Day Table purchase.” •• The Employment Center offers no guarantees of inter- All Employment Center data and registration must be views or jobs. Hiring decisions are not made during or entered on the MathJobs.org site. An existing account can immediately following interviews. In the current job be used for accessing Employment Center services and for market, the ratio of applicants to employers is about 6:1, paying applicable fees. If no account exists, participants can and many applicants go completely unnoticed. start an account solely for Employment Center use. •• There will ordinarily be no research-oriented postdoc- Employers are expected to create their own interview toral positions listed or discussed at the Employment schedules as far in advance as possible by using the assist- Center. ed-email system in MathJobs.org or by using other means •• Interviews will go to applicants who applied to jobs of communication. Please do not schedule an interview to during the fall and are now being sought out by the begin until fifteen minutes after the Employment Center institutions for in-person meetings during the JMM. opens. •• There will be no opportunity to speak to employers Please mark appointments as confirmed in your without a prearranged interview, and no walk-up job MathJobs.org account, as this will allow the appointments information tables. Scheduling of interviews will be to display in the applicants’ schedules. At the time of in- complete prior to the JMM. terview, meet the applicant in the on-site waiting area and The majority of Employment Center employers are ac- escort him or her to your table. ademic departments of mathematical sciences seeking to meet a short list of applicants who applied for their open Employers: How to Register positions during the fall. Each year, a few government or •• Registration runs from early September 2019 through industry employers are present. Often, they are seeking US December 26, 2019 at the following website: https:// citizens only due to existing contracts. www.mathjobs.org. After December 26, only “One Day All job postings are available on the website in advance, Tables” will be available. They should be reserved and and now that this electronic service is in place, there is no paid for through MathJobs.org. other messaging conducted on paper. •• Use your existing MathJobs.org account or create a new Please visit the Employment Center website for further Employer account at https://www.mathjobs.org. advice, information, and program updates at https://www Once a table is reserved, the ad can be placed at any time .ams.org/emp-reg. (or never) and will run until late January. •• For new users of MathJobs.org, click the NEW EM- Applicants: How to Register PLOYER link on the main page of https://www •• Early registration is vital since most employers will fi- .mathjobs.org. Choose your table type and fill out the nalize schedules before arriving in Denver. New Employer Form. •• To register, applicants should log into their MathJobs.org •• For existing users of MathJobs.org, go to https://www accounts or create a new account, look for the EmpCent .mathjobs.org. Log into your existing account. Pur- icon across the top toolbar, and mark that they will be chase a table by clicking the EmpCent logo in the menus attending by clicking the link, “click here if you are at- along the top toolbar. Use the “buy tables” link. Then tending the Employment Center.” You can then upload

October 2019 Notices of the American Mathematical Society 1593 JMM 2020

documents and peruse the list of employers attending and the positions available. You do not have the option to request an interview with an employer. However, if you are interested in any position, you can apply to the job. The employer will be aware that you are also attend- ing the event and will contact you directly if interested The automated job application database in setting up an interview. sponsored by the AMS. There are no Employment Center fees for applicants; however, admission to the Employment Center requires a 2020 JMM badge, obtainable by registering (and paying MathJobs.Org offers a paperless a fee) for the JMM. To register for the meeting, go to the application process for applicants and website: jointmathematicsmeetings.org/jmm. It is possible to attend one or more privately arranged employers in mathematics. interviews without an official Employment Center regis- Registered Applicants Can: tration; however, a meeting badge is required to access the • Create their own portfolio of application interview room. documents Applicants should keep track of their interview sched- • Make applications online to participating ules. If invited for an interview at a conflicting time, please employers ask the employer to offer a new time or suggest one. • Choose to make a cover sheet viewable by all registered employers For complete information, visit https://www.ams .org/emp-reg. FREE FOR APPLICANTS Questions about Employment Center registration and par- ticipation can be directed to Pamela Morin, AMS Professional Registered Employers Can: Programs Department, at 800-321-4267, ext. 4060, or by email • Post up to seven job ads to [email protected]. • Set all criteria for required documents, and add specific questions Credits • Receive and upload reference letters • Manage applicant information and Photo is courtesy of Kate Awtrey, Atlanta Convention Pho- correspondence quickly and easily tography. • Set limited access permissions for faculty and EOE administrators • Search for and sort additional applicants in the database • Choose an advertising-only account, or a discounted single ad account Visit mathjobs.org for pricing information.

CONTACT: AMS Professional Programs American Mathematical Society 201 Charles Street | Providence, RI 02904-2213 USA 800.321.4267, ext. 4096 | [email protected]

1594 Notices of the AmericAN mAthemAticAl society Volume 66, Number 9 2020 Joint Mathematics Meetings Advance Registration/Housing Form

Name (please print your name as you would like it to appear on your badge)

Mailing Address

Telephone Fax:

In case you have an emergency at the meeting: Day #: Evening #:

Email Address Additional email address for receipt Acknowledgment of this registration and any hotel reservations will be sent to the email address(es) given here. Check this box to receive a copy by U.S. Mail:

Affiliation for badge Nonmathematician guest badge name: (company/university) (Note fee of US$ 25) PLEASE NOTE THAT BADGES WILL NOT BE MAILED IN ADVANCE FOR THIS MEETING. YOU MAY OPT TO HAVE YOUR PROGRAM MAILED ON DEC. 12 (SEE BELOW). Registration Fees Payment Membership please P all that apply. First row is eligible to register as a member. Registration & Events Total (total from column on left $ For undergraduate students, membership in PME and KME also applies. o AMS & MAA o AMS but not MAA o MAA but not AMS o ASL o CMS o SIAM Hotel Deposit (only if paying by check) $ Undergraduate Students Only: o PME o KME If you send a hotel deposit check, the deadline for this form is December 1. Other Societies: o AWM o NAM o YMN o AMATYC Total Amount To Be Paid $ Joint Meetings by Dec 26 at mtg Subtotal o Member AMS, MAA, ASL, CMS, or SIAM US$ 360 US$ 473 Method of Payment o Nonmember US$ 570 US$ 727 o Check. Make checks payable to the AMS. For all check payments, o Graduate Student Member (AMS, MAA please keep a copy of this form for your records. ASL, CMS, or SIAM) US$ 90 US$ 104 o Credit Card. All major credit cards accepted. For your security, we o Graduate Student (Nonmember) US$ 140 US$ 152 do not accept credit card numbers by email, fax, or postal mail. If the MMSB o Undergraduate Student (Member AMS, receives your registration form by any of these methods, it will contact you at ASL, CMS, MAA, PME, KME, or SIAM) US$ 80 US$ 94 the phone number provided on this form. o Undergraduate Student (Nonmember) US$ 130 US$ 142 o High School Student US$ 10 US$ 20 o Unemployed US$ 80 US$ 94 Signature: o Temporarily Employed US$ 292 US$ 335 o Purchase Order # (please enclose copy) o Developing Countries Special Rate US$ 80 US$ 94 o Emeritus Member of AMS or MAA US$ 292 US$ 335 o High School Teacher US$ 80 US$ 94 Other Information o Librarian US$ 80 US$ 94 o Press US$ 0 US$ 0 Mathematical Reviews primary field of interest # o Exhibitor (Commercial) US$ 0 US$ 0 o Artist Exhibitor (work-JMM Art Exhibit only)US$ 0 US$ 0 o Are you willing to serve as a judge for the MAA Undergraduate Student o Nonmathematician Guest Poster Session? (Please P this box. of registered mathematician US$ 25 US$ 25 o If you are an undergraduate, are you interested in participating in the $ Radical Dash, a multi-day scavenger hunt sponsored by the MAA? (Please AMS Short Course: Mean Field Games (1/13-1/14) P this box.) o Member of AMS US$ 151 US$ 185 o Nonmember US$ 232 US$ 275 o Please P this box if you have a disability requiring special services. o Student, Unemployed, Emeritus US$ 84 US$ 105 To respect your privacy and to better serve you, please indicate your $ preferences for the following: MAA Minicourses (see listing in text) I would like to attend: o One Minicourse o Two Minicourses o Please include my name and affiliation on the JMM Participant List. Please enroll me in MAA Minicourse(s) #______and #______o Price: US$ 100 for each minicourse. Please include my name and postal address on promotional mailing lists. (For more than 2 minicourses, call or email the MMSB.) $ Registration for the Joint Meetings is not required for the short course but it is required for Graduate School Fair Table the minicourses and the Employment Center. To register for the Employment Center, go to o Graduate Program Table US$ 130 US$ 130 www.ams.org/profession/employment-services. For questions, email [email protected]. (includes table, posterboard & electricity) Dept. or Program to be represented (write below or email the MMSB) Registration Deadlines $ To be eligible for the complimentary hotel room lottery: Oct. 30, 2019 Receptions & Banquets In time to receive a program in the mail: Nov. 20, 2019 o Graduate Student/First-Time Attendee Reception (1/15) (no charge) Hotel reservations with check deposit: Dec. 1, 2019 o NAM Banquet (1/17) Hotel reservations and changes/cancellations #____Chicken #____Vegetarian US$ 65 through the JMM website: Dec. 18, 2019 #____Kosher (Additional fees apply for Kosher Meals.) US$ 98 Advance registration for the Joint Meetings, short Total for NAM Banquet $ course, minicourses, and dinner tickets: Dec. 26, 2019 o AMS Social (1/18) Regular Price #____US$ 75 Cancel in time to receive 50% refund on advance Student Price #____US$ 35 registration, banquets, minicourses, and short course: Jan. 8, 2020* Total for AMS Social $ *no refunds issued after this date. Printed Meeting Program (PLEASE CHOOSE) o Meeting Program (pick up at mtg only) US$ 5 Mailing Address/Contact: o Meeting Program mailed (U.S. residents only) US$ 10 Registration must be received by Nov. 20 to be eligible. Mathematics Meetings Service Bureau (MMSB) o I do not want a printed program. 201 Charles Street Total for Meeting Program/Shipping $ Providence, RI 02904-2213 Fax: 401-455-4004; Email: [email protected] Telephone: 401-455-4144 or 1-800-321-4267 x4144 or x4137 Total for Registrations and Events $ 2020 Joint Mathematics Meetings Hotel Reservations – Denver, CO

Please see the hotel page on the web at http://jointmathematicsmeetings.org for detailed information on each hotel. To ensure accurate assignments, please rank hotels in order of preference by writing 1, 2, 3, etc. in the column on the left and by circling the requested bed configuration. If your requested hotel and room type is no longer available, you will be assigned a room at the next available comparable rate. Please call the MMSB for details on suite configurations, sizes, availability, etc. All reservations, including suite reservations, must be made through the MMSB to receive the JMM rates. Reservations made directly with the hotels before December 19, 2019 are subject to being changed to a higher rate. All rates are subject to applicable local and state taxes in effect at the time of check-in; currently 14.75% state tax. Guarantee requirements: First night deposit by check (add to payment on reverse of form) or a credit card guarantee. Please note that reservations with check deposits must be received by the MMSB by December 1, 2019. People interested in suites should contact the MMSB directly at [email protected] or by calling 800-321-4267, ext. 4137; (401-455-4137). (See front of form.) o Hold with my credit card. For your security, we do not accept credit card numbers by email, postal mail or fax. If the MMSB receives your registration form by any of these methods, it will contact you at the phone number provided on the reverse of this form.

Date and Time of Arrival Date and Time of Departure Number of adult guests in room Number of children

Name of Other Adult Room Occupant (s) Arrival: Departure:

Housing Requests: (examples: rollaway cot, crib, nonsmoking room, low floor) o I have disabilities as defined by the ADA that require a sleeping room that is accessible to the physically challenged. My needs are: o I am a member of a hotel frequent-travel club and would like to receive appropriate credit. The hotel chain and card numbers are: o I am not reserving a room. I am sharing a room with , who is making the reservation.