Thomas Zaslavsky
Thomas Zaslavsky (born 1945) is an American mathematician specializing in combinatorics.
Zaslavsky's mother Claudia Zaslavsky was a high school mathematics teacher at New York; his father Sam Zaslavsky (from Manhattan) was an electrical engineer. Thomas Zaslavsky graduated from City College of New York. At M.I.T. he studied hyperplane arrangements with Curtis Greene and received a Ph.D. in 1974. In 1975 the American Mathematical Society published his doctoral thesis.
Zaslavsky has been a professor of mathematics at the Binghamton University, New York since 1985. He has published papers on matroid theory and has made available a bibliography on signed graphs and their applications. He has also written on coding theory, lattice point counting, and Sperner theory.
Select publications
- 2015: Bibliography, glossary, and problem list for signed, gained, and biased graphs from Binghamton University.
- 2003: "Faces of a hyperplane arrangement enumerated by ideal dimension, with application to plane, plaids, and Shi", Geometriae Dedicata 98: 63–80.
- 1983: (with Curtis Greene) "On the interpretation of Whitney numbers through arrangements of hyperplanes, zonotopes, non-Radon partitions, and orientations of graphs", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 280(1): 97–126, doi:10.2307/1999604MR 712251.
- 1975: Facing up to Arrangements: Face-count Formulas for Partitions of Space by Hyperplanes, Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society, Google Books preview.
References
- Thomas Zaslavsky at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- Thomas Zaslavsky's homepage
- Microsoft academic search