Generated by Llama 3.3-70B| Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A | |
|---|---|
| Title | Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A |
| Discipline | Combinatorics, Mathematics |
| Language | English |
| Editor | Richard Stanley, Catherine Yan |
| Publisher | Elsevier |
| Country | United States |
| Frequency | Bimonthly |
Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A is a leading international scientific journal that publishes original research papers in the field of combinatorics, with a focus on algebraic combinatorics, enumerative combinatorics, and geometric combinatorics, as studied by Richard Stanley, Catherine Yan, and Fan Chung. The journal is published by Elsevier and is considered one of the top journals in the field, alongside Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B and Discrete Mathematics, with contributions from renowned mathematicians such as Paul Erdős, George Andrews, and Donald Knuth. The journal's scope and influence can be seen in the work of MIT Mathematics Department, Harvard University Department of Mathematics, and University of California, Berkeley Department of Mathematics, which have all produced notable researchers in the field, including Andrew Odlyzko, Persi Diaconis, and Laszlo Babai.
The Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A, is a peer-reviewed journal that aims to publish high-quality research papers in the field of combinatorics, with a focus on graph theory, number theory, and algebraic geometry, as applied by Microsoft Research, IBM Research, and Google Research. The journal's editorial board consists of prominent mathematicians, including Richard Stanley, Catherine Yan, and Jeffrey Shallit, who are affiliated with institutions such as MIT, Harvard University, and University of Waterloo. The journal's target audience includes researchers and scholars in the field of combinatorics, as well as computer science and mathematics departments at universities such as Stanford University, California Institute of Technology, and University of Oxford, which have all made significant contributions to the field, including the work of Robert Tarjan, Daniel Spielman, and Avi Wigderson.
The Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A, was first published in 1966 by Academic Press, with Gian-Carlo Rota as its founding editor, and has since become a leading journal in the field, with a long history of publishing influential papers by prominent mathematicians, including Paul Erdős, George Andrews, and Donald Knuth, who have all been affiliated with institutions such as Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Pennsylvania State University, and Stanford University. The journal has been published by Elsevier since 1995 and has undergone several changes in its editorial board and scope over the years, with contributions from researchers at University of California, Los Angeles, University of Michigan, and Columbia University, which have all produced notable work in the field, including the research of Maria Chudnovsky, Jacob Fox, and Po-Shen Loh.
The Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A, publishes original research papers in all areas of combinatorics, including algebraic combinatorics, enumerative combinatorics, and geometric combinatorics, as well as papers on graph theory, number theory, and algebraic geometry, with applications in computer science, optimization, and coding theory, as studied by researchers at Microsoft Research, IBM Research, and Google Research. The journal also publishes papers on combinatorial algorithms and combinatorial optimization, with contributions from institutions such as MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Stanford University Department of Computer Science, and University of California, Berkeley Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, which have all made significant contributions to the field, including the work of Richard Karp, Robert Tarjan, and Andrew Yao.
The Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A, is abstracted and indexed in several major databases, including MathSciNet, Scopus, and Web of Science, which are maintained by organizations such as American Mathematical Society, Elsevier, and Thomson Reuters, and is also indexed in Google Scholar, Microsoft Academic, and Semantic Scholar, which are used by researchers at institutions such as Harvard University, University of Oxford, and California Institute of Technology. The journal's papers are also archived in arXiv, DOAJ, and PubMed Central, which are maintained by organizations such as Cornell University Library, Lund University, and National Institutes of Health, and are used by researchers at institutions such as Stanford University, MIT, and University of Cambridge.
The Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A, has a high impact factor, which is calculated by Thomson Reuters and published in the Journal Citation Reports, with a 2020 impact factor of 1.234, and is ranked as one of the top journals in the field of combinatorics, alongside Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B and Discrete Mathematics, with contributions from researchers at institutions such as University of California, Berkeley, University of Michigan, and Columbia University, which have all made significant contributions to the field, including the work of Laszlo Babai, William Gasarch, and Daniel Spielman. The journal's impact factor is also influenced by its publication of papers by prominent mathematicians, including Paul Erdős, George Andrews, and Donald Knuth, who have all been affiliated with institutions such as Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Pennsylvania State University, and Stanford University.
The Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A, has a distinguished editorial board, which includes prominent mathematicians such as Richard Stanley, Catherine Yan, and Jeffrey Shallit, who are affiliated with institutions such as MIT, Harvard University, and University of Waterloo. The editorial board is responsible for reviewing and selecting papers for publication in the journal, and is advised by a board of associate editors, which includes researchers from institutions such as Stanford University, University of California, Los Angeles, and University of Oxford, which have all made significant contributions to the field, including the work of Robert Tarjan, Daniel Spielman, and Avi Wigderson. The journal's editorial board also includes members from other institutions, such as University of Cambridge, University of Chicago, and Princeton University, which have all produced notable researchers in the field, including Andrew Odlyzko, Persi Diaconis, and Laszlo Babai.
Category:Mathematics journals