Title | My most productive period is now at IBS | ||||
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Name | Department of Communications | Registration Date | 2015-08-06 | Hits | 3227 |
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[Interview] Dr. Drummond-Cole, Research Fellow
He
earned his BA at the University of California at Berkeley and his Ph.D.
at the City University of New York. Upon graduating, he worked as an
NSF postdoctoral research fellow and Ralph P. Boas assistant professor
at Northwestern University for three years. During this time, Professor
Jae-Suk Park, an IBS group leader invited him to visit Korea, where CGP
had just begun operations. "Professor Park and my doctoral advisor were long-time friends and collaborators, and they have known each other maybe 20 years or longer." he said. When Dr. Drummond-Cole was nearing the end of his postdoc at Northwestern University, Professor Park encouraged him to apply to IBS. Though he had never seriously considered working outside of the US, the year he finished his postdoc was not a good year for the mathematics job market. "The offer from IBS was clearly the best option. I was a little nervous, but I decided to come here and give it a try." Getting used to Korean life - jolmyeon is my favorite food "My
schedule is not really fixed because I have many collaborators in
Europe and the United States. They normally have teaching requirements
and administrative duties that I don’t have. Sometimes I have a Skype
meeting at my apartment very early in the morning or very late at night
with collaborators. Other than that I work in my office." One of his favorite pastimes is playing board games. He owns about 300 games, including the traditional Korean board game 윷놀이 (yutnori), which he bought in Korea. He is also interested in other Korean games including 화투 (hwa-too) and 주령구(juryeong-gu). Though
a strict vegetarian, he is trying to familiarize himself with Korean
foods. Since many Korean foods include fish sauce or anchovy broth, he
regrets not being able to enjoy Korean food as much as he would like to. "What
makes it a little hard for me is that some food labels do not have
specific enough information about the ingredients, but I think I have
adapted pretty well and am happy with my options. My favorites are
probably jolmyeon and 콩국수 (konggooksu)."
Particularly, the shapes he is interested in are usually related in some way to Riemann surfaces, which are two dimensional shapes, like the surface of a sphere or a torus, possibly with holes cut in them. "You can think of the holes as inputs or outputs and the shape itself as some sort of machine. For example, a multiplication might be a sphere with two holes at the top, for the two things that you are multiplying together and one hole at the bottom for the thing you get after you do the multiplication," he said. These
structures are related to certain kinds of field theories in
theoretical physics. Other than that, Riemann surfaces are a topic of
wide interest and applicability throughout mathematics so his interests
interface with those of other mathematicians. To become a world-class institution, Improving the living environment is important Dr.
Drummond-Cole speaks honestly from an overseas researcher’s point of
view. He suggests IBS should give more budgetary independence to
Centers. "I think the more budgetary independence the individual research centers
have, the better our chances are to accomplish the goals set out for us.
As theoretical scientists, we don’t need expensive lab equipment at
CGP. On the other hand, we often need to invite visitors from around the
world to work intensively together on collaborative projects. Some of
these visits should be for several weeks or longer. This is too long for
some visitors to be comfortable at a hotel. For this reason, it is
important for us to have a guest apartment for long-term visitors. But
there are many budgetary restrictions that make finding and maintaining a
guest apartment much harder than it needs to be." The living and work environments are also important factors for international researchers when deciding on whether to come to or stay with IBS. Therefore, he believes that there must be an improvement in the both environments to attract and retain highly qualified overseas scientists. "Initially there was a plan to build an international school here in Pohang, which I think was cancelled. This has made it very hard for us to recruit international scholars who already have families. But there are also obstructions to recruiting talented international researchers who do not have children. For instance, there is a lot of uncertainty about what exactly ‘tenure’ means at IBS. Multiple international researchers, including some job applicants, have asked me for details about job security at IBS; questions that headquarters just haven’t been able to give us any answers about yet." ![]() My most productive period is now at IBS Since
having joined IBS, Dr. Drummond-Cole has a number of research projects
that he has been focusing on. He wrote in the IBS journal about his work
on homotopy probability theory. He is also working on projects related
to string topology, configuration spaces of surfaces, and homotopy
algebra. "At this point I don’t have one single overriding research goal. As I said, I am working on many things here and I feel really great. I've been working on and done a couple of other projects that I didn't even mention. I feel that this is the most productive period that I've had in my career so far. My hope is that I can find and contribute to many interesting problems, as well as learn new tools and new techniques so that others may find that my constructions and my insights are useful in their own research." As an international scientist, he advised young Korean researchers to obtain more opportunities to go abroad. "I wish that the young Korean graduate students and postdoctoral researchers got more opportunities to interact with international scholars and present their work, because mathematics is extremely global. It would be great if they got more support for travel." He concluded the interview by expressing appreciation to the Korean people. "I appreciate that Korean taxpayers’ money is used for IBS, and I’m grateful for the opportunities given to me. Thank you Korea and I appreciate that you’re funding my research. I’ll try to do the best work that I can to be worthy of that." |
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