Contact Information:
Robin Tucker-Drob
Caltech Mathematics Department
1200 E. California Blvd., M/C 253-37
Pasadena, CA 91125
rtuckerd at caltech dot edu

About me:
• I am a Ph.D. Candidate in mathematics here at Caltech. Here is my cv.
• After the 2012-2013 academic year I will be starting an NSF Mathematical Sciences Postdoctoral Research Fellowship at Rutgers University. Here is some of my application material.

Papers

  1. Shift-minimal groups, fixed price 1, and the unique trace property, Submitted. pdf
  2. Mixing actions of countable groups are almost free, Submitted. pdf
  3. Weak equivalence and non-classifiability of measure preserving actions, Submitted. pdf
  4. On a co-induction question of Kechris, (with L. Bowen), To appear in Israel J. of Math. pdf
  5. Ultraproducts of measure preserving actions and graph combinatorics, (with C. T. Conley and A. S. Kechris), To appear in Ergodic Theory and Dynam. Systems. pdf
  6. The complexity of classification problems in ergodic theory, (with A. S. Kechris), To appear in Appalachian Set Theory, Ed. by J. Cummings and E. Schimmerling, London Math. Society Lecture Note Series. pdf
Back to top

Teaching

Current Teaching:
Past Teaching:
Back to top

Slides

Shift-minimal groups and cost - Slides from the Logic In Southern California V meeting at UC Irvine.
Shift-minimal groups - Slides from the Fields Institute Workshop on Applications to Operator Algebras.
Ultraproducts of measure preserving actions and graph combinatorics - Slides from Caltech-UCLA Logic Seminar.

Back to top

Conferences, Workshops, Meetings

Here are some conferences, workshops, and meetings that I have attended or plan to attend:

2014:
Set Theory
2013:
AMS Spring Southeastern Sectional Meeting, University of Mississippi, Oxford, MS
Logic in Southern California V
2012:
Special Session on Set Theory and Its Applications
Logic in Southern California IV
Workshop on Applications to Operator Algebras
Descriptive Set Theory and Functional Analysis
Logic, Dynamics and their Interactions
Groups, Geometry, and Random Structures
Appalachian Set Theory: Set theory and von Neumann algebras
Logic in Southern California II
Back to top