After spending two years at the University of Toronto, Nelson returned to Hamilton to study at McMaster University. She received her B.Sc in mathematics from
McMaster in 1965, followed by an M.Sc in mathematics from McMaster in 1967. She succeeded in having her thesis work published in the Canadian Journal of Mathematics, also in 1967; the article was entitled "Finiteness of semigroups of operators in universal algebra".[1]
Nelson completed her Ph.D in 1970. Her thesis was entitled "The lattice of equational classes of commutative semigroups", and the ideas also formed a journal paper published in the Canadian Journal of Mathematics.[3][4]
Career
Following completion of her Ph.D., Nelson continued at McMaster. She first worked as a post-doctoral researcher, later as a "research associate", and in 1978 was appointed associate professor.[3] Serving as chair of the Unit of Computer Science at McMaster from 1982 until 1984, Nelson became a full professor in 1983.[5]
Nelson's teaching record was, according to one colleague, "invariably of the highest order". However, before earning a faculty position at McMaster, prejudice against her led to doubts about her teaching ability.[3]
Nelson published over 40 papers during her 20-year career. She died from cancer in 1987.[3]
Recognition
Nelson is the namesake, along with Cecilia Krieger, of the Krieger–Nelson Prize, which is awarded to a female mathematician in recognition
of outstanding achievement.[2] The Department of Mathematics at McMaster University has a lecture series, "The Evelyn
Nelson Lectures", held since 1991.[6]
Mekler, Alan H.; Nelson, Evelyn; Shelah, Saharon (March 1993). "A Variety with Solvable, but not Uniformly Solvable, Word Problem". Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. s3-66 (2): 225–256. arXiv:math/9301203. doi:10.1112/plms/s3-66.2.225. S2CID11025580.
Burris, Stanley; Nelson, Evelyn (September 1971). "Embedding the Dual of Π m in the Lattice of Equational Classes of Commutative Semigroups". Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society. 30 (1): 37. doi:10.2307/2038214. JSTOR2038214.