Olivia Caramello Explained

Olivia Caramello
Birth Date:29 November 1984
Nationality:Italian
Fields:Mathematics
Workplaces:University of Insubria
Alma Mater:University of Turin
Known For:Contributions to topos theory, toposes as bridges theory
Awards:Gelfand Chair at IHES, Paris, France

Olivia Caramello is an Italian mathematician. She holds a national Rita Levi-Montalcini associate professorship[1] at the University of Insubria[2] in Como, Italy. She is known for her work in topos theory and for pioneering the technique of toposes as bridges. She authored the 2017 book Theories, Sites, Toposes: Relating and studying mathematical theories through topos-theoretic bridges.[3] [4]

Education and early career

Caramello earned her bachelor's degree in mathematics at the University of Turin and her Diploma in Piano at the Conservatorio di Cuneo[5] at the age of 19.

In 2009, she obtained her Ph.D. in Mathematics at the University of Cambridge (UK), as a Prince of Wales Student of Trinity College, with a thesis entitled "The duality between Grothendieck toposes and geometric theories" under the supervision of Peter Johnstone.[6] In 2016, she obtained her Habilitation at Paris Diderot University with a habilitation thesis entitled "Grothendieck toposes as unifying bridges in Mathematics".[7]

Caramello has held a research fellowship at Jesus College, Cambridge and post-doctoral appointments at the De Giorgi Center of the Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa, Paris Diderot University and the University of Milan (as holder of a Marie Curie Fellowship of the Istituto Nazionale di Alta Matematica) and the Institut des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques.[8]

Work

Caramello developed the theory of "toposes as bridges", which consists in methods and techniques for unifying different mathematical theories and transferring information between them by using toposes. This theory is based on the duality of sites and Grothendieck toposes, and on the notion of classifying topos of a geometric first-order theory, exploiting the diversity of possible presentations of each topos by infinitely many sites or theories. Caramello's theory involves several components : on the one hand, establishing equivalences between toposes presented in different ways; on the other hand, calculating or expressing topos invariants in terms of the various types of presentations considered, in order to produce correspondences between properties or elements of these various presentations.[9]

The theory of "toposes as bridges" can be considered a meta-mathematical theory of the relations between different theories[10] and her program contributes to realizing the unifying potential of the notion of topos already glimpsed by Alexander Grothendieck.

Caramello organized international conferences in topos theory, "Topos à l'IHES" (2015).[11] and "Toposes in Como" (2018)[12] She is an editor of the journal Logica Universalis[13] and is running a blog and forum about toposes.[14]

Awards and recognition

Caramello was awarded the AILA[15] (Associazione Italiana di Logica e sue Applicazioni) Prize in 2011,[16] a "L'Oréal-Unesco Fellowship for Women in Science" in 2014[17] and a "Rita Levi Montalcini" position of the Italian Ministry for Education, University and Research in 2017.[18] Caramello's methodology of toposes as bridges has been qualified by André Joyal as a "vast extension of Felix Klein's Erlangen Programme"[19] and has been endorsed by Fields Medalists Alain Connes[20] and Laurent Lafforgue.[21]

Controversy

In 2015 Caramello had a public controversy with a number of senior exponents of the category theory community, whom she accused of spreading negative ungrounded opinions on her work;[22] her case is discussed in an academic paper.

Selected publications

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Contratti Finanziati Bando 2013. 2021-03-21. Ministero dell'Università e della Ricerca.
  2. Web site: CARAMELLO OLIVIA Professore Associato DIPARTIMENTO DI SCIENZA E ALTA TECNOLOGIA.
  3. Review of Theories, Sites, Toposes: Andrzej Wiśnicki,
  4. Web site: Theories, Sites, Toposes.
  5. Web site: Construindo novas pontes na mathematica.
  6. Web site: Olivia Caramello. 2021-03-21. Mathematics Genealogy Project.
  7. Web site: Grothendieck toposes as unifying 'bridges' in mathematics. .
  8. Web site: IHES, Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques Université Paris-Saclay.
  9. Web site: Grothendieck toposes as unifying 'bridges' in Mathematics.
  10. Web site: La th ́eorie de Caramello : un cadre en construction pour des correspondances du type de celle de Langlands ?. 2021-03-21.
  11. Web site: Topos à l'IHES. 2015.
  12. Web site: Toposes in Como. 2018.
  13. Web site: Editors of Logica Universalis.
  14. Web site: Around Toposes, A blog and forum about toposes, 'bridges' and the unification programme.
  15. Web site: Associazione Italiana di Logica e sue Applicazioni.
  16. Web site: AILA Prize in 2011.
  17. Web site: Institute Professors' Awards. IHES. 2024-04-19.
  18. Web site: Programma per Giovani Ricercatori "Rita Levi Montalcini".
  19. Web site: André Joyal's letter.
  20. Web site: Report on Habilitation Thesis by Olivia Caramello. 2016.
  21. Web site: La theorie de Caramello: un cadre en construction pour des correspondances du type de celle de Langlands?. Laurent Lafforgue.
  22. Web site: Unifying theory, Controversy with category theorists.