How to accelerate progress in mathematical researchConsequences of the Riemann hypothesisVisual representation of mathematical research interrelationshipsResearch statement in PhD applications--how much is too much?Research-level mathematical bookstoresHow does one justify funding for mathematics research?Examples of research on how people perceive mathematical objectsMathematical research papers in general science journalsHow do you mentor undergraduate research?What happened to “Research in the Mathematical Sciences”?

How to accelerate progress in mathematical research


Consequences of the Riemann hypothesisVisual representation of mathematical research interrelationshipsResearch statement in PhD applications--how much is too much?Research-level mathematical bookstoresHow does one justify funding for mathematics research?Examples of research on how people perceive mathematical objectsMathematical research papers in general science journalsHow do you mentor undergraduate research?What happened to “Research in the Mathematical Sciences”?













8












$begingroup$


After a completing a Ph.D. in pure mathematics I left academia 10 years ago for working in industry. There, a typical question is "What can we do to accelerate $x$?" when a project is slowed down, and the typical answer is "Let the people concerned with the issue focus on it and/or bring in some experts", which usually solves the issue.



I wonder if mathematical research can work the same way. Say if you had $100 million to spare and really wanted to see the Riemann hypothesis resolved, what would you do?



  • Would it help to finance a special decade at some institution, where 25 leading researchers are free from everyday concerns (in particular, administrative and teaching duties) and can spend their entire time working on this problem together?


  • Would it be better to use these funds to let the 25 experts each supervise 10 graduate students over a course of 20 years? Or to support some sort of crowdsourcing?


  • Or is it just not possible to focus exclusively on one (incredibly difficult) problem and one should rather pursue whatever is doable at the moment? Is it similar to (paraphrasing Don Knuth) "Computer science is like the Great Wall of China where each workman contributes a brick"?










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$









  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Your proposal for a special decade sounds like 10x the length and 10x the people of the IAS special years (math.ias.edu/special-years), also 10y later than their program on analytic number theory (math.ias.edu/sp/ant).
    $endgroup$
    – Matt F.
    8 hours ago







  • 1




    $begingroup$
    If one looks at famous open problems that have survived for a long time that were solved in the last century, most of them have the following feature: their solution took decades of mathematical breakthroughs to achieve, culminating in one final brilliant breakthrough, granting the person(s) who put the 'capstone' on the problem extraordinary credit, and everyone else who contributed much less so. For RH, there is no sign that the program that will ultimately solve it has even been initiated.
    $endgroup$
    – Stanley Yao Xiao
    7 hours ago






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    You might (re-)read The Mythical Man-Month by Fred Brooks Jr. (either the essay or the book). If you are interested in discussing this seriously, I can come up with ideas, and you can contact me using the email address on my user page. This forum is not well suited for your question: you might see if it fares better at Academia.StackExchange. Gerhard "More People Makes It Slower" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
    $endgroup$
    – Gerhard Paseman
    7 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @GerhardPaseman, I think this forum is well-suited to the question, since the answer will likely be specific to mathematical research -- for accelerating progress on a problem in biology or economics (e.g. thoughtco.com/unsolved-economics-problems-on-wikipedia-1148177 or realclearscience.com/lists/unsolved_problems_in_biology), the answers would be substantially different.
    $endgroup$
    – Matt F.
    7 hours ago






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    The problem is that it asks for opinion, not fact. While it is a good question (and one I have been considering), this forum is not well suited for discussion, which is where I see this leading. If you have a good answer that is not just opinion, I encourage you to post it. Gerhard "Will Read Well Opined Answers" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
    $endgroup$
    – Gerhard Paseman
    6 hours ago
















8












$begingroup$


After a completing a Ph.D. in pure mathematics I left academia 10 years ago for working in industry. There, a typical question is "What can we do to accelerate $x$?" when a project is slowed down, and the typical answer is "Let the people concerned with the issue focus on it and/or bring in some experts", which usually solves the issue.



I wonder if mathematical research can work the same way. Say if you had $100 million to spare and really wanted to see the Riemann hypothesis resolved, what would you do?



  • Would it help to finance a special decade at some institution, where 25 leading researchers are free from everyday concerns (in particular, administrative and teaching duties) and can spend their entire time working on this problem together?


  • Would it be better to use these funds to let the 25 experts each supervise 10 graduate students over a course of 20 years? Or to support some sort of crowdsourcing?


  • Or is it just not possible to focus exclusively on one (incredibly difficult) problem and one should rather pursue whatever is doable at the moment? Is it similar to (paraphrasing Don Knuth) "Computer science is like the Great Wall of China where each workman contributes a brick"?










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$









  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Your proposal for a special decade sounds like 10x the length and 10x the people of the IAS special years (math.ias.edu/special-years), also 10y later than their program on analytic number theory (math.ias.edu/sp/ant).
    $endgroup$
    – Matt F.
    8 hours ago







  • 1




    $begingroup$
    If one looks at famous open problems that have survived for a long time that were solved in the last century, most of them have the following feature: their solution took decades of mathematical breakthroughs to achieve, culminating in one final brilliant breakthrough, granting the person(s) who put the 'capstone' on the problem extraordinary credit, and everyone else who contributed much less so. For RH, there is no sign that the program that will ultimately solve it has even been initiated.
    $endgroup$
    – Stanley Yao Xiao
    7 hours ago






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    You might (re-)read The Mythical Man-Month by Fred Brooks Jr. (either the essay or the book). If you are interested in discussing this seriously, I can come up with ideas, and you can contact me using the email address on my user page. This forum is not well suited for your question: you might see if it fares better at Academia.StackExchange. Gerhard "More People Makes It Slower" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
    $endgroup$
    – Gerhard Paseman
    7 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @GerhardPaseman, I think this forum is well-suited to the question, since the answer will likely be specific to mathematical research -- for accelerating progress on a problem in biology or economics (e.g. thoughtco.com/unsolved-economics-problems-on-wikipedia-1148177 or realclearscience.com/lists/unsolved_problems_in_biology), the answers would be substantially different.
    $endgroup$
    – Matt F.
    7 hours ago






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    The problem is that it asks for opinion, not fact. While it is a good question (and one I have been considering), this forum is not well suited for discussion, which is where I see this leading. If you have a good answer that is not just opinion, I encourage you to post it. Gerhard "Will Read Well Opined Answers" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
    $endgroup$
    – Gerhard Paseman
    6 hours ago














8












8








8


3



$begingroup$


After a completing a Ph.D. in pure mathematics I left academia 10 years ago for working in industry. There, a typical question is "What can we do to accelerate $x$?" when a project is slowed down, and the typical answer is "Let the people concerned with the issue focus on it and/or bring in some experts", which usually solves the issue.



I wonder if mathematical research can work the same way. Say if you had $100 million to spare and really wanted to see the Riemann hypothesis resolved, what would you do?



  • Would it help to finance a special decade at some institution, where 25 leading researchers are free from everyday concerns (in particular, administrative and teaching duties) and can spend their entire time working on this problem together?


  • Would it be better to use these funds to let the 25 experts each supervise 10 graduate students over a course of 20 years? Or to support some sort of crowdsourcing?


  • Or is it just not possible to focus exclusively on one (incredibly difficult) problem and one should rather pursue whatever is doable at the moment? Is it similar to (paraphrasing Don Knuth) "Computer science is like the Great Wall of China where each workman contributes a brick"?










share|cite|improve this question











$endgroup$




After a completing a Ph.D. in pure mathematics I left academia 10 years ago for working in industry. There, a typical question is "What can we do to accelerate $x$?" when a project is slowed down, and the typical answer is "Let the people concerned with the issue focus on it and/or bring in some experts", which usually solves the issue.



I wonder if mathematical research can work the same way. Say if you had $100 million to spare and really wanted to see the Riemann hypothesis resolved, what would you do?



  • Would it help to finance a special decade at some institution, where 25 leading researchers are free from everyday concerns (in particular, administrative and teaching duties) and can spend their entire time working on this problem together?


  • Would it be better to use these funds to let the 25 experts each supervise 10 graduate students over a course of 20 years? Or to support some sort of crowdsourcing?


  • Or is it just not possible to focus exclusively on one (incredibly difficult) problem and one should rather pursue whatever is doable at the moment? Is it similar to (paraphrasing Don Knuth) "Computer science is like the Great Wall of China where each workman contributes a brick"?







soft-question big-list






share|cite|improve this question















share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question








edited 4 hours ago


























community wiki





user50667











  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Your proposal for a special decade sounds like 10x the length and 10x the people of the IAS special years (math.ias.edu/special-years), also 10y later than their program on analytic number theory (math.ias.edu/sp/ant).
    $endgroup$
    – Matt F.
    8 hours ago







  • 1




    $begingroup$
    If one looks at famous open problems that have survived for a long time that were solved in the last century, most of them have the following feature: their solution took decades of mathematical breakthroughs to achieve, culminating in one final brilliant breakthrough, granting the person(s) who put the 'capstone' on the problem extraordinary credit, and everyone else who contributed much less so. For RH, there is no sign that the program that will ultimately solve it has even been initiated.
    $endgroup$
    – Stanley Yao Xiao
    7 hours ago






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    You might (re-)read The Mythical Man-Month by Fred Brooks Jr. (either the essay or the book). If you are interested in discussing this seriously, I can come up with ideas, and you can contact me using the email address on my user page. This forum is not well suited for your question: you might see if it fares better at Academia.StackExchange. Gerhard "More People Makes It Slower" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
    $endgroup$
    – Gerhard Paseman
    7 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @GerhardPaseman, I think this forum is well-suited to the question, since the answer will likely be specific to mathematical research -- for accelerating progress on a problem in biology or economics (e.g. thoughtco.com/unsolved-economics-problems-on-wikipedia-1148177 or realclearscience.com/lists/unsolved_problems_in_biology), the answers would be substantially different.
    $endgroup$
    – Matt F.
    7 hours ago






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    The problem is that it asks for opinion, not fact. While it is a good question (and one I have been considering), this forum is not well suited for discussion, which is where I see this leading. If you have a good answer that is not just opinion, I encourage you to post it. Gerhard "Will Read Well Opined Answers" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
    $endgroup$
    – Gerhard Paseman
    6 hours ago













  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Your proposal for a special decade sounds like 10x the length and 10x the people of the IAS special years (math.ias.edu/special-years), also 10y later than their program on analytic number theory (math.ias.edu/sp/ant).
    $endgroup$
    – Matt F.
    8 hours ago







  • 1




    $begingroup$
    If one looks at famous open problems that have survived for a long time that were solved in the last century, most of them have the following feature: their solution took decades of mathematical breakthroughs to achieve, culminating in one final brilliant breakthrough, granting the person(s) who put the 'capstone' on the problem extraordinary credit, and everyone else who contributed much less so. For RH, there is no sign that the program that will ultimately solve it has even been initiated.
    $endgroup$
    – Stanley Yao Xiao
    7 hours ago






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    You might (re-)read The Mythical Man-Month by Fred Brooks Jr. (either the essay or the book). If you are interested in discussing this seriously, I can come up with ideas, and you can contact me using the email address on my user page. This forum is not well suited for your question: you might see if it fares better at Academia.StackExchange. Gerhard "More People Makes It Slower" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
    $endgroup$
    – Gerhard Paseman
    7 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    @GerhardPaseman, I think this forum is well-suited to the question, since the answer will likely be specific to mathematical research -- for accelerating progress on a problem in biology or economics (e.g. thoughtco.com/unsolved-economics-problems-on-wikipedia-1148177 or realclearscience.com/lists/unsolved_problems_in_biology), the answers would be substantially different.
    $endgroup$
    – Matt F.
    7 hours ago






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    The problem is that it asks for opinion, not fact. While it is a good question (and one I have been considering), this forum is not well suited for discussion, which is where I see this leading. If you have a good answer that is not just opinion, I encourage you to post it. Gerhard "Will Read Well Opined Answers" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
    $endgroup$
    – Gerhard Paseman
    6 hours ago








1




1




$begingroup$
Your proposal for a special decade sounds like 10x the length and 10x the people of the IAS special years (math.ias.edu/special-years), also 10y later than their program on analytic number theory (math.ias.edu/sp/ant).
$endgroup$
– Matt F.
8 hours ago





$begingroup$
Your proposal for a special decade sounds like 10x the length and 10x the people of the IAS special years (math.ias.edu/special-years), also 10y later than their program on analytic number theory (math.ias.edu/sp/ant).
$endgroup$
– Matt F.
8 hours ago





1




1




$begingroup$
If one looks at famous open problems that have survived for a long time that were solved in the last century, most of them have the following feature: their solution took decades of mathematical breakthroughs to achieve, culminating in one final brilliant breakthrough, granting the person(s) who put the 'capstone' on the problem extraordinary credit, and everyone else who contributed much less so. For RH, there is no sign that the program that will ultimately solve it has even been initiated.
$endgroup$
– Stanley Yao Xiao
7 hours ago




$begingroup$
If one looks at famous open problems that have survived for a long time that were solved in the last century, most of them have the following feature: their solution took decades of mathematical breakthroughs to achieve, culminating in one final brilliant breakthrough, granting the person(s) who put the 'capstone' on the problem extraordinary credit, and everyone else who contributed much less so. For RH, there is no sign that the program that will ultimately solve it has even been initiated.
$endgroup$
– Stanley Yao Xiao
7 hours ago




2




2




$begingroup$
You might (re-)read The Mythical Man-Month by Fred Brooks Jr. (either the essay or the book). If you are interested in discussing this seriously, I can come up with ideas, and you can contact me using the email address on my user page. This forum is not well suited for your question: you might see if it fares better at Academia.StackExchange. Gerhard "More People Makes It Slower" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
$endgroup$
– Gerhard Paseman
7 hours ago




$begingroup$
You might (re-)read The Mythical Man-Month by Fred Brooks Jr. (either the essay or the book). If you are interested in discussing this seriously, I can come up with ideas, and you can contact me using the email address on my user page. This forum is not well suited for your question: you might see if it fares better at Academia.StackExchange. Gerhard "More People Makes It Slower" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
$endgroup$
– Gerhard Paseman
7 hours ago




1




1




$begingroup$
@GerhardPaseman, I think this forum is well-suited to the question, since the answer will likely be specific to mathematical research -- for accelerating progress on a problem in biology or economics (e.g. thoughtco.com/unsolved-economics-problems-on-wikipedia-1148177 or realclearscience.com/lists/unsolved_problems_in_biology), the answers would be substantially different.
$endgroup$
– Matt F.
7 hours ago




$begingroup$
@GerhardPaseman, I think this forum is well-suited to the question, since the answer will likely be specific to mathematical research -- for accelerating progress on a problem in biology or economics (e.g. thoughtco.com/unsolved-economics-problems-on-wikipedia-1148177 or realclearscience.com/lists/unsolved_problems_in_biology), the answers would be substantially different.
$endgroup$
– Matt F.
7 hours ago




2




2




$begingroup$
The problem is that it asks for opinion, not fact. While it is a good question (and one I have been considering), this forum is not well suited for discussion, which is where I see this leading. If you have a good answer that is not just opinion, I encourage you to post it. Gerhard "Will Read Well Opined Answers" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
$endgroup$
– Gerhard Paseman
6 hours ago





$begingroup$
The problem is that it asks for opinion, not fact. While it is a good question (and one I have been considering), this forum is not well suited for discussion, which is where I see this leading. If you have a good answer that is not just opinion, I encourage you to post it. Gerhard "Will Read Well Opined Answers" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
$endgroup$
– Gerhard Paseman
6 hours ago











2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















12














$begingroup$

Wikipedia is a great project, and it is without doubt a big impactful resource. With this as inspiration,
I started to collect definitions, theorems, formulas and references together with some examples, for topics regarding symmetric functions. This is skewed towards more personal interests and a bit too technical to be on wikipedia.



This has accelerated my personal research projects, as I can refer new collaborators to this page, instead of asking them to find the correct page in a book or paywalled article.
I also try to keep up with the latest research, so that the information is fresh, and quickly available.



Having quick access to definitions and references, which are easily found by search engines, and viewable on a regular web page with a smartphone, should help facilitate quicker progress.



The conclusion is, funding an online resource with the purpose to quickly get a new PhD student or researcher new to the field up to speed, is probably a good investment.



Aggregating and streamlining learning existing results and knowledge is a good step to produce new knowledge, in my opinion.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$










  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Yes, putting everything on-line as a first (or zero-th) approximation, and then having serious people refine and streamline, ... repeatedly, if appropriate... with their personal reputations giving some kind of guarantee of veracity... gives a more efficient starting-point for further progress.
    $endgroup$
    – paul garrett
    6 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    One could argue similarly that MathOverflow is another such resource. While I think you have a good point, I believe Stanley's observation above is more pertinent to the question asked. I am unsure how your approach would improve the current literature assembled (and being assembled) on the Riemann Hypothesis. Gerhard "Wikipedia Does Deserve More Funding" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
    $endgroup$
    – Gerhard Paseman
    5 hours ago


















1














$begingroup$

Here's one budget for spending the money over 10 years. Obviously all the numbers are only indicative.



$$$75 million for child care for mathematically trained people who want to work on these issues, an average of $$$7,500 per year for 10 years for 1000 people each year. Household cleaning and food preparation could also be included. This would free up the time of current researchers, and open up the research to mathematically trained people, especially women, who are spending their time on work in the household instead of research.



$$$10 million as prize money for unconditional proofs of known consequences of either the Riemann or Generalized Riemann Hypothesis. Perhaps this would be 20 prizes, each worth $$$500,000, based on the lists of consequences here, here or here. The ideas in those proofs would be good sources ideas for proving the Riemann hypothesis.



$$$10 million in travel grants to encourage global collaboration on these topics. Perhaps this would be 10 years of 400 grants per year of $$$2,500 each, covering airfare and a week of expenses in each case.



$$$4 million to help people write up their research or their expository works in the area. Perhaps this means that for each of 10 years there are 10 people being paid an average of $$$40,000 per year to help write up this work.



$$$1 million to make existing numerical research in the area more accessible, e.g. better access to tables of the zeroes, translations of relevant algorithms into nice packages in several languages.



Note all of this money may go further in countries with high levels of mathematics but cheaper costs of living. Conditions for work on the Riemann hypothesis are already relatively good for math professors at American or European universities; to make a big step forward, it may help to involve people who are mathematically talented but not in those roles, for whatever reason.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$














  • $begingroup$
    I'm not sure the grants for unconditional results currently known to depend on RH would be move in the direction of RH. Many of those results use methods which wouldn't directly move in that direction. For example, there are statements which have been proven via "Assume RH. Then X" and then some proves "Assume ~RH. Then X."
    $endgroup$
    – JoshuaZ
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    JoshuaZ, if you can use that technique to prove “Assume ~RH. Then RH”, it would be good enough! Anyway, what other sorts of results would you suggest that are easier than RH but on the way there?
    $endgroup$
    – Matt F.
    1 hour ago













Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "504"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: true,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: 10,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/"u003ecc by-sa 4.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);














draft saved

draft discarded
















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmathoverflow.net%2fquestions%2f340039%2fhow-to-accelerate-progress-in-mathematical-research%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









12














$begingroup$

Wikipedia is a great project, and it is without doubt a big impactful resource. With this as inspiration,
I started to collect definitions, theorems, formulas and references together with some examples, for topics regarding symmetric functions. This is skewed towards more personal interests and a bit too technical to be on wikipedia.



This has accelerated my personal research projects, as I can refer new collaborators to this page, instead of asking them to find the correct page in a book or paywalled article.
I also try to keep up with the latest research, so that the information is fresh, and quickly available.



Having quick access to definitions and references, which are easily found by search engines, and viewable on a regular web page with a smartphone, should help facilitate quicker progress.



The conclusion is, funding an online resource with the purpose to quickly get a new PhD student or researcher new to the field up to speed, is probably a good investment.



Aggregating and streamlining learning existing results and knowledge is a good step to produce new knowledge, in my opinion.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$










  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Yes, putting everything on-line as a first (or zero-th) approximation, and then having serious people refine and streamline, ... repeatedly, if appropriate... with their personal reputations giving some kind of guarantee of veracity... gives a more efficient starting-point for further progress.
    $endgroup$
    – paul garrett
    6 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    One could argue similarly that MathOverflow is another such resource. While I think you have a good point, I believe Stanley's observation above is more pertinent to the question asked. I am unsure how your approach would improve the current literature assembled (and being assembled) on the Riemann Hypothesis. Gerhard "Wikipedia Does Deserve More Funding" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
    $endgroup$
    – Gerhard Paseman
    5 hours ago















12














$begingroup$

Wikipedia is a great project, and it is without doubt a big impactful resource. With this as inspiration,
I started to collect definitions, theorems, formulas and references together with some examples, for topics regarding symmetric functions. This is skewed towards more personal interests and a bit too technical to be on wikipedia.



This has accelerated my personal research projects, as I can refer new collaborators to this page, instead of asking them to find the correct page in a book or paywalled article.
I also try to keep up with the latest research, so that the information is fresh, and quickly available.



Having quick access to definitions and references, which are easily found by search engines, and viewable on a regular web page with a smartphone, should help facilitate quicker progress.



The conclusion is, funding an online resource with the purpose to quickly get a new PhD student or researcher new to the field up to speed, is probably a good investment.



Aggregating and streamlining learning existing results and knowledge is a good step to produce new knowledge, in my opinion.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$










  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Yes, putting everything on-line as a first (or zero-th) approximation, and then having serious people refine and streamline, ... repeatedly, if appropriate... with their personal reputations giving some kind of guarantee of veracity... gives a more efficient starting-point for further progress.
    $endgroup$
    – paul garrett
    6 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    One could argue similarly that MathOverflow is another such resource. While I think you have a good point, I believe Stanley's observation above is more pertinent to the question asked. I am unsure how your approach would improve the current literature assembled (and being assembled) on the Riemann Hypothesis. Gerhard "Wikipedia Does Deserve More Funding" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
    $endgroup$
    – Gerhard Paseman
    5 hours ago













12














12










12







$begingroup$

Wikipedia is a great project, and it is without doubt a big impactful resource. With this as inspiration,
I started to collect definitions, theorems, formulas and references together with some examples, for topics regarding symmetric functions. This is skewed towards more personal interests and a bit too technical to be on wikipedia.



This has accelerated my personal research projects, as I can refer new collaborators to this page, instead of asking them to find the correct page in a book or paywalled article.
I also try to keep up with the latest research, so that the information is fresh, and quickly available.



Having quick access to definitions and references, which are easily found by search engines, and viewable on a regular web page with a smartphone, should help facilitate quicker progress.



The conclusion is, funding an online resource with the purpose to quickly get a new PhD student or researcher new to the field up to speed, is probably a good investment.



Aggregating and streamlining learning existing results and knowledge is a good step to produce new knowledge, in my opinion.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$



Wikipedia is a great project, and it is without doubt a big impactful resource. With this as inspiration,
I started to collect definitions, theorems, formulas and references together with some examples, for topics regarding symmetric functions. This is skewed towards more personal interests and a bit too technical to be on wikipedia.



This has accelerated my personal research projects, as I can refer new collaborators to this page, instead of asking them to find the correct page in a book or paywalled article.
I also try to keep up with the latest research, so that the information is fresh, and quickly available.



Having quick access to definitions and references, which are easily found by search engines, and viewable on a regular web page with a smartphone, should help facilitate quicker progress.



The conclusion is, funding an online resource with the purpose to quickly get a new PhD student or researcher new to the field up to speed, is probably a good investment.



Aggregating and streamlining learning existing results and knowledge is a good step to produce new knowledge, in my opinion.







share|cite|improve this answer














share|cite|improve this answer



share|cite|improve this answer








answered 6 hours ago


























community wiki





Per Alexandersson











  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Yes, putting everything on-line as a first (or zero-th) approximation, and then having serious people refine and streamline, ... repeatedly, if appropriate... with their personal reputations giving some kind of guarantee of veracity... gives a more efficient starting-point for further progress.
    $endgroup$
    – paul garrett
    6 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    One could argue similarly that MathOverflow is another such resource. While I think you have a good point, I believe Stanley's observation above is more pertinent to the question asked. I am unsure how your approach would improve the current literature assembled (and being assembled) on the Riemann Hypothesis. Gerhard "Wikipedia Does Deserve More Funding" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
    $endgroup$
    – Gerhard Paseman
    5 hours ago












  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Yes, putting everything on-line as a first (or zero-th) approximation, and then having serious people refine and streamline, ... repeatedly, if appropriate... with their personal reputations giving some kind of guarantee of veracity... gives a more efficient starting-point for further progress.
    $endgroup$
    – paul garrett
    6 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    One could argue similarly that MathOverflow is another such resource. While I think you have a good point, I believe Stanley's observation above is more pertinent to the question asked. I am unsure how your approach would improve the current literature assembled (and being assembled) on the Riemann Hypothesis. Gerhard "Wikipedia Does Deserve More Funding" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
    $endgroup$
    – Gerhard Paseman
    5 hours ago







1




1




$begingroup$
Yes, putting everything on-line as a first (or zero-th) approximation, and then having serious people refine and streamline, ... repeatedly, if appropriate... with their personal reputations giving some kind of guarantee of veracity... gives a more efficient starting-point for further progress.
$endgroup$
– paul garrett
6 hours ago




$begingroup$
Yes, putting everything on-line as a first (or zero-th) approximation, and then having serious people refine and streamline, ... repeatedly, if appropriate... with their personal reputations giving some kind of guarantee of veracity... gives a more efficient starting-point for further progress.
$endgroup$
– paul garrett
6 hours ago




1




1




$begingroup$
One could argue similarly that MathOverflow is another such resource. While I think you have a good point, I believe Stanley's observation above is more pertinent to the question asked. I am unsure how your approach would improve the current literature assembled (and being assembled) on the Riemann Hypothesis. Gerhard "Wikipedia Does Deserve More Funding" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
$endgroup$
– Gerhard Paseman
5 hours ago




$begingroup$
One could argue similarly that MathOverflow is another such resource. While I think you have a good point, I believe Stanley's observation above is more pertinent to the question asked. I am unsure how your approach would improve the current literature assembled (and being assembled) on the Riemann Hypothesis. Gerhard "Wikipedia Does Deserve More Funding" Paseman, 2019.09.06.
$endgroup$
– Gerhard Paseman
5 hours ago











1














$begingroup$

Here's one budget for spending the money over 10 years. Obviously all the numbers are only indicative.



$$$75 million for child care for mathematically trained people who want to work on these issues, an average of $$$7,500 per year for 10 years for 1000 people each year. Household cleaning and food preparation could also be included. This would free up the time of current researchers, and open up the research to mathematically trained people, especially women, who are spending their time on work in the household instead of research.



$$$10 million as prize money for unconditional proofs of known consequences of either the Riemann or Generalized Riemann Hypothesis. Perhaps this would be 20 prizes, each worth $$$500,000, based on the lists of consequences here, here or here. The ideas in those proofs would be good sources ideas for proving the Riemann hypothesis.



$$$10 million in travel grants to encourage global collaboration on these topics. Perhaps this would be 10 years of 400 grants per year of $$$2,500 each, covering airfare and a week of expenses in each case.



$$$4 million to help people write up their research or their expository works in the area. Perhaps this means that for each of 10 years there are 10 people being paid an average of $$$40,000 per year to help write up this work.



$$$1 million to make existing numerical research in the area more accessible, e.g. better access to tables of the zeroes, translations of relevant algorithms into nice packages in several languages.



Note all of this money may go further in countries with high levels of mathematics but cheaper costs of living. Conditions for work on the Riemann hypothesis are already relatively good for math professors at American or European universities; to make a big step forward, it may help to involve people who are mathematically talented but not in those roles, for whatever reason.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$














  • $begingroup$
    I'm not sure the grants for unconditional results currently known to depend on RH would be move in the direction of RH. Many of those results use methods which wouldn't directly move in that direction. For example, there are statements which have been proven via "Assume RH. Then X" and then some proves "Assume ~RH. Then X."
    $endgroup$
    – JoshuaZ
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    JoshuaZ, if you can use that technique to prove “Assume ~RH. Then RH”, it would be good enough! Anyway, what other sorts of results would you suggest that are easier than RH but on the way there?
    $endgroup$
    – Matt F.
    1 hour ago















1














$begingroup$

Here's one budget for spending the money over 10 years. Obviously all the numbers are only indicative.



$$$75 million for child care for mathematically trained people who want to work on these issues, an average of $$$7,500 per year for 10 years for 1000 people each year. Household cleaning and food preparation could also be included. This would free up the time of current researchers, and open up the research to mathematically trained people, especially women, who are spending their time on work in the household instead of research.



$$$10 million as prize money for unconditional proofs of known consequences of either the Riemann or Generalized Riemann Hypothesis. Perhaps this would be 20 prizes, each worth $$$500,000, based on the lists of consequences here, here or here. The ideas in those proofs would be good sources ideas for proving the Riemann hypothesis.



$$$10 million in travel grants to encourage global collaboration on these topics. Perhaps this would be 10 years of 400 grants per year of $$$2,500 each, covering airfare and a week of expenses in each case.



$$$4 million to help people write up their research or their expository works in the area. Perhaps this means that for each of 10 years there are 10 people being paid an average of $$$40,000 per year to help write up this work.



$$$1 million to make existing numerical research in the area more accessible, e.g. better access to tables of the zeroes, translations of relevant algorithms into nice packages in several languages.



Note all of this money may go further in countries with high levels of mathematics but cheaper costs of living. Conditions for work on the Riemann hypothesis are already relatively good for math professors at American or European universities; to make a big step forward, it may help to involve people who are mathematically talented but not in those roles, for whatever reason.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$














  • $begingroup$
    I'm not sure the grants for unconditional results currently known to depend on RH would be move in the direction of RH. Many of those results use methods which wouldn't directly move in that direction. For example, there are statements which have been proven via "Assume RH. Then X" and then some proves "Assume ~RH. Then X."
    $endgroup$
    – JoshuaZ
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    JoshuaZ, if you can use that technique to prove “Assume ~RH. Then RH”, it would be good enough! Anyway, what other sorts of results would you suggest that are easier than RH but on the way there?
    $endgroup$
    – Matt F.
    1 hour ago













1














1










1







$begingroup$

Here's one budget for spending the money over 10 years. Obviously all the numbers are only indicative.



$$$75 million for child care for mathematically trained people who want to work on these issues, an average of $$$7,500 per year for 10 years for 1000 people each year. Household cleaning and food preparation could also be included. This would free up the time of current researchers, and open up the research to mathematically trained people, especially women, who are spending their time on work in the household instead of research.



$$$10 million as prize money for unconditional proofs of known consequences of either the Riemann or Generalized Riemann Hypothesis. Perhaps this would be 20 prizes, each worth $$$500,000, based on the lists of consequences here, here or here. The ideas in those proofs would be good sources ideas for proving the Riemann hypothesis.



$$$10 million in travel grants to encourage global collaboration on these topics. Perhaps this would be 10 years of 400 grants per year of $$$2,500 each, covering airfare and a week of expenses in each case.



$$$4 million to help people write up their research or their expository works in the area. Perhaps this means that for each of 10 years there are 10 people being paid an average of $$$40,000 per year to help write up this work.



$$$1 million to make existing numerical research in the area more accessible, e.g. better access to tables of the zeroes, translations of relevant algorithms into nice packages in several languages.



Note all of this money may go further in countries with high levels of mathematics but cheaper costs of living. Conditions for work on the Riemann hypothesis are already relatively good for math professors at American or European universities; to make a big step forward, it may help to involve people who are mathematically talented but not in those roles, for whatever reason.






share|cite|improve this answer











$endgroup$



Here's one budget for spending the money over 10 years. Obviously all the numbers are only indicative.



$$$75 million for child care for mathematically trained people who want to work on these issues, an average of $$$7,500 per year for 10 years for 1000 people each year. Household cleaning and food preparation could also be included. This would free up the time of current researchers, and open up the research to mathematically trained people, especially women, who are spending their time on work in the household instead of research.



$$$10 million as prize money for unconditional proofs of known consequences of either the Riemann or Generalized Riemann Hypothesis. Perhaps this would be 20 prizes, each worth $$$500,000, based on the lists of consequences here, here or here. The ideas in those proofs would be good sources ideas for proving the Riemann hypothesis.



$$$10 million in travel grants to encourage global collaboration on these topics. Perhaps this would be 10 years of 400 grants per year of $$$2,500 each, covering airfare and a week of expenses in each case.



$$$4 million to help people write up their research or their expository works in the area. Perhaps this means that for each of 10 years there are 10 people being paid an average of $$$40,000 per year to help write up this work.



$$$1 million to make existing numerical research in the area more accessible, e.g. better access to tables of the zeroes, translations of relevant algorithms into nice packages in several languages.



Note all of this money may go further in countries with high levels of mathematics but cheaper costs of living. Conditions for work on the Riemann hypothesis are already relatively good for math professors at American or European universities; to make a big step forward, it may help to involve people who are mathematically talented but not in those roles, for whatever reason.







share|cite|improve this answer














share|cite|improve this answer



share|cite|improve this answer








answered 5 hours ago


























community wiki





Matt F.















  • $begingroup$
    I'm not sure the grants for unconditional results currently known to depend on RH would be move in the direction of RH. Many of those results use methods which wouldn't directly move in that direction. For example, there are statements which have been proven via "Assume RH. Then X" and then some proves "Assume ~RH. Then X."
    $endgroup$
    – JoshuaZ
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    JoshuaZ, if you can use that technique to prove “Assume ~RH. Then RH”, it would be good enough! Anyway, what other sorts of results would you suggest that are easier than RH but on the way there?
    $endgroup$
    – Matt F.
    1 hour ago
















  • $begingroup$
    I'm not sure the grants for unconditional results currently known to depend on RH would be move in the direction of RH. Many of those results use methods which wouldn't directly move in that direction. For example, there are statements which have been proven via "Assume RH. Then X" and then some proves "Assume ~RH. Then X."
    $endgroup$
    – JoshuaZ
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    JoshuaZ, if you can use that technique to prove “Assume ~RH. Then RH”, it would be good enough! Anyway, what other sorts of results would you suggest that are easier than RH but on the way there?
    $endgroup$
    – Matt F.
    1 hour ago















$begingroup$
I'm not sure the grants for unconditional results currently known to depend on RH would be move in the direction of RH. Many of those results use methods which wouldn't directly move in that direction. For example, there are statements which have been proven via "Assume RH. Then X" and then some proves "Assume ~RH. Then X."
$endgroup$
– JoshuaZ
2 hours ago




$begingroup$
I'm not sure the grants for unconditional results currently known to depend on RH would be move in the direction of RH. Many of those results use methods which wouldn't directly move in that direction. For example, there are statements which have been proven via "Assume RH. Then X" and then some proves "Assume ~RH. Then X."
$endgroup$
– JoshuaZ
2 hours ago












$begingroup$
JoshuaZ, if you can use that technique to prove “Assume ~RH. Then RH”, it would be good enough! Anyway, what other sorts of results would you suggest that are easier than RH but on the way there?
$endgroup$
– Matt F.
1 hour ago




$begingroup$
JoshuaZ, if you can use that technique to prove “Assume ~RH. Then RH”, it would be good enough! Anyway, what other sorts of results would you suggest that are easier than RH but on the way there?
$endgroup$
– Matt F.
1 hour ago


















draft saved

draft discarded















































Thanks for contributing an answer to MathOverflow!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.


To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmathoverflow.net%2fquestions%2f340039%2fhow-to-accelerate-progress-in-mathematical-research%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

19. јануар Садржај Догађаји Рођења Смрти Празници и дани сећања Види још Референце Мени за навигацијуу

Israel Cuprins Etimologie | Istorie | Geografie | Politică | Demografie | Educație | Economie | Cultură | Note explicative | Note bibliografice | Bibliografie | Legături externe | Meniu de navigaresite web oficialfacebooktweeterGoogle+Instagramcanal YouTubeInstagramtextmodificaremodificarewww.technion.ac.ilnew.huji.ac.ilwww.weizmann.ac.ilwww1.biu.ac.ilenglish.tau.ac.ilwww.haifa.ac.ilin.bgu.ac.ilwww.openu.ac.ilwww.ariel.ac.ilCIA FactbookHarta Israelului"Negotiating Jerusalem," Palestine–Israel JournalThe Schizoid Nature of Modern Hebrew: A Slavic Language in Search of a Semitic Past„Arabic in Israel: an official language and a cultural bridge”„Latest Population Statistics for Israel”„Israel Population”„Tables”„Report for Selected Countries and Subjects”Human Development Report 2016: Human Development for Everyone„Distribution of family income - Gini index”The World FactbookJerusalem Law„Israel”„Israel”„Zionist Leaders: David Ben-Gurion 1886–1973”„The status of Jerusalem”„Analysis: Kadima's big plans”„Israel's Hard-Learned Lessons”„The Legacy of Undefined Borders, Tel Aviv Notes No. 40, 5 iunie 2002”„Israel Journal: A Land Without Borders”„Population”„Israel closes decade with population of 7.5 million”Time Series-DataBank„Selected Statistics on Jerusalem Day 2007 (Hebrew)”Golan belongs to Syria, Druze protestGlobal Survey 2006: Middle East Progress Amid Global Gains in FreedomWHO: Life expectancy in Israel among highest in the worldInternational Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook Database, April 2011: Nominal GDP list of countries. Data for the year 2010.„Israel's accession to the OECD”Popular Opinion„On the Move”Hosea 12:5„Walking the Bible Timeline”„Palestine: History”„Return to Zion”An invention called 'the Jewish people' – Haaretz – Israel NewsoriginalJewish and Non-Jewish Population of Palestine-Israel (1517–2004)ImmigrationJewishvirtuallibrary.orgChapter One: The Heralders of Zionism„The birth of modern Israel: A scrap of paper that changed history”„League of Nations: The Mandate for Palestine, 24 iulie 1922”The Population of Palestine Prior to 1948originalBackground Paper No. 47 (ST/DPI/SER.A/47)History: Foreign DominationTwo Hundred and Seventh Plenary Meeting„Israel (Labor Zionism)”Population, by Religion and Population GroupThe Suez CrisisAdolf EichmannJustice Ministry Reply to Amnesty International Report„The Interregnum”Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs – The Palestinian National Covenant- July 1968Research on terrorism: trends, achievements & failuresThe Routledge Atlas of the Arab–Israeli conflict: The Complete History of the Struggle and the Efforts to Resolve It"George Habash, Palestinian Terrorism Tactician, Dies at 82."„1973: Arab states attack Israeli forces”Agranat Commission„Has Israel Annexed East Jerusalem?”original„After 4 Years, Intifada Still Smolders”From the End of the Cold War to 2001originalThe Oslo Accords, 1993Israel-PLO Recognition – Exchange of Letters between PM Rabin and Chairman Arafat – Sept 9- 1993Foundation for Middle East PeaceSources of Population Growth: Total Israeli Population and Settler Population, 1991–2003original„Israel marks Rabin assassination”The Wye River Memorandumoriginal„West Bank barrier route disputed, Israeli missile kills 2”"Permanent Ceasefire to Be Based on Creation Of Buffer Zone Free of Armed Personnel Other than UN, Lebanese Forces"„Hezbollah kills 8 soldiers, kidnaps two in offensive on northern border”„Olmert confirms peace talks with Syria”„Battleground Gaza: Israeli ground forces invade the strip”„IDF begins Gaza troop withdrawal, hours after ending 3-week offensive”„THE LAND: Geography and Climate”„Area of districts, sub-districts, natural regions and lakes”„Israel - Geography”„Makhteshim Country”Israel and the Palestinian Territories„Makhtesh Ramon”„The Living Dead Sea”„Temperatures reach record high in Pakistan”„Climate Extremes In Israel”Israel in figures„Deuteronom”„JNF: 240 million trees planted since 1901”„Vegetation of Israel and Neighboring Countries”Environmental Law in Israel„Executive branch”„Israel's election process explained”„The Electoral System in Israel”„Constitution for Israel”„All 120 incoming Knesset members”„Statul ISRAEL”„The Judiciary: The Court System”„Israel's high court unique in region”„Israel and the International Criminal Court: A Legal Battlefield”„Localities and population, by population group, district, sub-district and natural region”„Israel: Districts, Major Cities, Urban Localities & Metropolitan Areas”„Israel-Egypt Relations: Background & Overview of Peace Treaty”„Solana to Haaretz: New Rules of War Needed for Age of Terror”„Israel's Announcement Regarding Settlements”„United Nations Security Council Resolution 497”„Security Council resolution 478 (1980) on the status of Jerusalem”„Arabs will ask U.N. to seek razing of Israeli wall”„Olmert: Willing to trade land for peace”„Mapping Peace between Syria and Israel”„Egypt: Israel must accept the land-for-peace formula”„Israel: Age structure from 2005 to 2015”„Global, regional, and national disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) for 306 diseases and injuries and healthy life expectancy (HALE) for 188 countries, 1990–2013: quantifying the epidemiological transition”10.1016/S0140-6736(15)61340-X„World Health Statistics 2014”„Life expectancy for Israeli men world's 4th highest”„Family Structure and Well-Being Across Israel's Diverse Population”„Fertility among Jewish and Muslim Women in Israel, by Level of Religiosity, 1979-2009”„Israel leaders in birth rate, but poverty major challenge”„Ethnic Groups”„Israel's population: Over 8.5 million”„Israel - Ethnic groups”„Jews, by country of origin and age”„Minority Communities in Israel: Background & Overview”„Israel”„Language in Israel”„Selected Data from the 2011 Social Survey on Mastery of the Hebrew Language and Usage of Languages”„Religions”„5 facts about Israeli Druze, a unique religious and ethnic group”„Israël”Israel Country Study Guide„Haredi city in Negev – blessing or curse?”„New town Harish harbors hopes of being more than another Pleasantville”„List of localities, in alphabetical order”„Muncitorii români, doriți în Israel”„Prietenia româno-israeliană la nevoie se cunoaște”„The Higher Education System in Israel”„Middle East”„Academic Ranking of World Universities 2016”„Israel”„Israel”„Jewish Nobel Prize Winners”„All Nobel Prizes in Literature”„All Nobel Peace Prizes”„All Prizes in Economic Sciences”„All Nobel Prizes in Chemistry”„List of Fields Medallists”„Sakharov Prize”„Țara care și-a sfidat "destinul" și se bate umăr la umăr cu Silicon Valley”„Apple's R&D center in Israel grew to about 800 employees”„Tim Cook: Apple's Herzliya R&D center second-largest in world”„Lecții de economie de la Israel”„Land use”Israel Investment and Business GuideA Country Study: IsraelCentral Bureau of StatisticsFlorin Diaconu, „Kadima: Flexibilitate și pragmatism, dar nici un compromis în chestiuni vitale", în Revista Institutului Diplomatic Român, anul I, numărul I, semestrul I, 2006, pp. 71-72Florin Diaconu, „Likud: Dreapta israeliană constant opusă retrocedării teritoriilor cureite prin luptă în 1967", în Revista Institutului Diplomatic Român, anul I, numărul I, semestrul I, 2006, pp. 73-74MassadaIsraelul a crescut in 50 de ani cât alte state intr-un mileniuIsrael Government PortalIsraelIsraelIsraelmmmmmXX451232cb118646298(data)4027808-634110000 0004 0372 0767n7900328503691455-bb46-37e3-91d2-cb064a35ffcc1003570400564274ge1294033523775214929302638955X146498911146498911

Кастелфранко ди Сопра Становништво Референце Спољашње везе Мени за навигацију43°37′18″ СГШ; 11°33′32″ ИГД / 43.62156° СГШ; 11.55885° ИГД / 43.62156; 11.5588543°37′18″ СГШ; 11°33′32″ ИГД / 43.62156° СГШ; 11.55885° ИГД / 43.62156; 11.558853179688„The GeoNames geographical database”„Istituto Nazionale di Statistica”проширитиууWorldCat156923403n850174324558639-1cb14643287r(подаци)