A team of three Oxford undergraduates has accomplished something
extraordinary: Alex Frolkin, Frederick van der Wyck, and Stephen Burgess,
all 3rd year straight maths students at Merton College, have been selected
as one of the 7 Outstanding Winners and have been awarded the
Institute for Operations Research and Management Science (INFORMS)
Prize in the 2004 Mathematical Contest in Modelling (MCM) organized by The
Consortium for Mathematics and its Applications (COMAP). Still more
extraordinary, this was their first time competing in the contest which is
typically dominated by institutions that have been training and entering
teams for many years.
The MCM is a major international competition that is now in its 20th
year of operation. This year there were nearly 600 entries from more than
10 countries. The contest took place over a 96 hour period from February
5th to the 9th. At the start of that period two open-ended mathematical
modelling problems of real-world importance were revealed on a website.
Teams then chose one of the two problems and worked round the clock with
little or no sleep over the next four days to produce a written report
describing the construction of a model and how analysis of the model
yields a practical solution to the problem at hand.
Alex, Frederick, and Stephen demonstrated the versatility of their
mathematical backgrounds by choosing Problem B, which deals with
designing a more efficient system for the distribution of ride tickets
at an amusement park in order to minimize time spent waiting in
queues. They combined tools from statistics, computer simulation and
mathematics to determine an optimal strategy. In the 96 hours of the
contest they produced a paper good enough to be published in a
journal! In fact, it will be published later this year in the UMAP
Journal (a journal that emphasizes applied maths, modelling, and
undergraduate research), along with the other winning entries from
this year's contest.
The team was organized by Prof. Ulrike Tillmann (Merton College) and was
coached by maths graduate student Jeff Giansiracusa (Merton College),
who competed in the MCM several times as an undergraduate.
See also the
official
contest results.