Profile: Wai Ling Yee, University of Waterloo
Profile by Ken Davidson (KRD),
University of Waterloo.
Wai Ling Yee graduated from the University of Waterloo this
past August, and was one of our top students. As well as being a
student in my second year group theory class, I knew her from
two summers she spent working here on summer NSERC grants where we
had a number of students working in analysis. Part of their time
was spent running a learning seminar (on convexity one year, and
on continuous optimization the other).
She worked on a research project with Kathryn Hare
04 on some
questions about harmonic analysis on Lie groups, a subject Wai
Ling knew nothing about when she started. This was a very
successful project that resulted in a publication each summer.
The first has appearred:
As a result, Wai Ling Yee was nominated for the AMS-MAA-SIAM
Frank and Brennie Morgan Prize
05 for Outstanding Research
in Mathematics by an Undergraduate Student. She was a very close runner
up for this award.
Wai Ling Yee also did extremely well on the
Putnam
06, getting
an Honorable Mention in the 1999 competition.
She was the highest ranking women last year, and so won the
Elizabeth Putnam prize
07.
That was a good year for Waterloo, which won the team competition
by virtue of a stirling performance by many students including two
Putnam fellows (top 6 overall) and two Honorable Mentions
(top 30 overall).
Wai Ling is now a graduate student at MIT (http://www-math.mit.edu). I
recently had a conversation with her, and she answered the following
questions by e-mail. The other comments were from our unrecorded
conversation.
- .
- Where are you from originally?
I was born in Toronto and grew up in Mississauga.
- .
- What program did you study at U. Waterloo?
I completed a double honours degree in computer science and
pure mathematics at the University of Waterloo.
- .
- What parts of your studies did you like best?
I most enjoyed courses in which the professor gave
interesting problems. I would have to say that the students and
professors at Waterloo were what made my undergraduate experience
so extraordinary. Not only was I constantly astounded by the
abilities of my classmates, I was fortunate to find that they were
extremely supportive people. The pure mathematics professors
always took a personal interest in their students. Even though I
have graduated, some of them still check up on me intermittently
to see how I'm doing.
KRD: She also mentioned that she appreciated the emphasis on
problem solving in and out of courses. Apparently other graduate
students from places like Harvard had not learned how to give
complete proofs, and still believed that it was enough to present
the rough idea. Wai Ling felt that she had learned how to give
complete arguments.
- .
- Tell us a bit about your summer NSERC project with
Kathryn Hare.
During my first summer working as a research assistant, Prof.
Hare gave me the problem of finding pointwise bounds for the trace
of a representation applied to a non-central element of a Lie
group in terms of the degree of the representation. From these
bounds, we determined the minimal integer k such that any
continuous orbital measure convolved with itself k times belongs
to L2. The following summer, we found the minimal number k
for which the Fourier transform of any continuous, orbital measure
belongs to l2.
- .
- What are you studying now at MIT?
I'm taking courses in Lie theory, differential geometry, and
partial differential equations. I have yet to choose an area of
specialization.
KRD: She tells me that she really likes Lie groups, which was one
of the reasons for choosing MIT in the first place. She did not
much enjoy PDEs. The differential geometry was hard, perhaps
because of the next answer.
- .
- How well prepared were you for grad school?
In the areas of algebra and analysis, Waterloo had prepared me
well. However, I would have appreciated more knowledge in the
areas of topology and geometry. Certainly, this would have been a
smaller problem had I chosen to major in applied mathematics
instead of computer science.
KRD: I was also a graduate student in the US after a Canadian
undergraduate degree (many years ago), and my experience was
similar. Canadian programs are more intensive in the major
subject, but no program does everything. I also felt that my
background in analysis and algebra was outstanding, but I was
missing the differential geometry background that American
students from top schools had. I imagine that Wai Ling's
knowledge of computer science will come in handy, and that she
will overcome the deficit in geometry.
- .
- What are your interests outside of mathematics?
Of my hobbies, I spend the most time playing classical music and jazz and
swing dancing. I find that they provide a relaxing contrast to
mathematics. The athletic facilities at Waterloo and MIT have enabled me
to take up new sports such as cross-country skiing and hockey, which I
enjoy immensely.
I thank Ken Davidson (Pure Mathematics Department, University of Waterloo)
for contributing this article. His website address is
http://www.math.uwaterloo.ca/

krdavids
-Ed.
Andrew J. Irwin
2001-03-19