Math Professor Lauren Williams Explores New Ground

Williams feels at home researching underexplored subjects.

Lauren Williams

Lauren Williams
Photograph by Jim Harrison

Jealous of elementary-school classmates who spoke foreign languages, Robinson professor of mathematics Lauren Williams found another way to communicate: code. Employing math tricks and patterns, she and her sister developed a system for conversing. Initially more interested in words than numbers, she’d attempted to write and illustrate her own fantasy novel. But after winning a fourth-grade math competition in her hometown of Palos Verdes, California, computation ascended. Summer programs for high-school students taught her that her interest wasn’t just a list of rules, but a creative field: “The idea that I could figure out something new that nobody knew before was very cool.” She entered the College interested in combinatorics, but no classes on the subject existed. Unfazed, Williams took algebra courses and worked on a combinatorics thesis with Richard Stanley at MIT. After graduating in 2000 and enrolling in a Ph.D. program there, she continued exploring new and under-studied fields: cluster algebras, tropical geometry. Her research continued as a professor at UC Berkeley, starting in 2009, where she made further breakthroughs with the positive Grassmanian, a shape whose points represent components of simpler geometric objects. This work has helped her model shallow-water waves and subatomic particle collisions—and become only the second woman to receive tenure in Harvard’s math department, in 2018. “As a researcher, what’s probably most rewarding to me is finding connections between fields that you don’t expect to be talking to each other.” Though most thinking takes place at her desk, some ideas emerge when playing with her children, six and nine. “Mama,” one said on her fifth birthday, “this is the greatest year of my life: I’m five, my name starts with an E, and I was born in May.” The patterns continue. 

Read more articles by Jacob Sweet
Related topics

You might also like

Landscape Architect Julie Bargmann Transforming Forgotten Urban Sites

Julie Bargmann and her D.I.R.T. Studio give new life to abandoned mines, car plants, and more.

Preserving the History of Jim Crow Era Safe Havens

Architectural historian Catherine Zipf is building a database of Green Book sites.  

Matt Levine's Bloomberg Finance Column Makes Money Funny

Matt Levine’s spunky Bloomberg column

Most popular

See Their Faces

Confronting “some of the most challenging images in the history of photography”

What Trump Means for John Roberts’s Legacy

Executive power is on the docket at the Supreme Court.

Martin Nowak Sanctioned for Jeffrey Epstein Involvement

The Faculty of Arts and Sciences announces disciplinary actions.

Explore More From Current Issue

A man in a gray suit sits confidently in a vintage armchair, holding a glass.

The Life of a Harvard Spy

Richard Skeffington Welch’s illustrious—and clandestine—career in the CIA

Aisha Muharrar with shoulder-length hair, wearing a green blazer and white shirt.

Parks and Rec Comedy Writer Aisha Muharrar Gets Serious about Grief

With Loved One, the Harvard grad and Lampoon veteran makes her debut as a novelist.