Jason Miller is a mathematician who works in probability theory. He studies random curves, shapes, and surfaces which arise in statistical mechanics models in two dimensions. With his co-authors, he has made contributions to the study of the Schramm-Loewner evolution, random planar maps, Liouville quantum gravity, and related stochastic processes.
He has been recognized with several awards, including the Rollo Davidson Prize (2015), the Whitehead Prize (2016), the Clay Research Award (2017), the Doeblin Prize (2018), the Eisenbud Prize (2023), and the Fermat Prize (2023). He was an invited speaker at the ICM in 2018. He completed his PhD in 2011 at Stanford University under the direction of Amir Dembo and was based at Microsoft Research and MIT before moving to the University of Cambridge, where he is currently a Professor of Mathematics.
Professional position
- Professor, Department of Pure Mathematics and Mathematical Statistics, University of Cambridge