Arroyo's favorite subject since first grade was math[3] and she went on to major in mathematics at Stanford University, advised by Ralph Louis Cohen. She then attended Cornell University for graduate study,[3] and completed her Ph.D. in 1993 with the dissertation Towards a Computational Complexity Theory that uses Approximate Data and Knowledge supervised by James Renegar.[4]
Career
Arroyo is part of the 43-member Applied Mathematics Group at Boeing's Research and Technology group where she works with Boeing's engineers to develop mathematical algorithms and tools that they can use to reduce costs and contracting costs and the improve company's product designs. In the course of her work, she works with "all aspects of the mathematical problem solving process" from defining problem requirements to developing mathematical formulations, constructing and implementing algorithms and delivering tools and supporting analysis.[3]
She has provided mathematics support on a wide variety of Boeing projects including airline scheduling, supply chain logistics, transportation scheduling, production issues, communications networks, scheduling for in-flight refueling and sensor scheduling.[3]
She is also a member of the Steering Committee of the BIG Math Network.[3]
Selected publications
Dennis, J. E., Sharon F. Arroyo, Evin J. Cramer, and Paul D. Frank. "Problem formulations for systems of systems." In 2005 IEEE International Conference on Systems, Man and Cybernetics, vol. 1, pp. 64–71. IEEE, 2005.
Arroyo, Sharon F., Evin J. Cramer, John E. Dennis, and Paul D. Frank. "Comparing problem formulations for coupled sets of components." Optimization and Engineering 10, no. 4 (2009): 557-573.
Thunemann, P. Zack, Raju Mattikalli, Sharon Arroyo, and Paul Frank. "Characterizing the tradeoffs between different sensor allocation and management algorithms." In 2009 12th International Conference on Information Fusion, pp. 1473–1480. IEEE, 2009.
Delage, Erick, Sharon Arroyo, and Yinyu Ye. "The Value of Stochastic Modeling in Two-Stage Stochastic Programs."
^ abcdefLanius, Melinda; Diaz-Lope, Alexander (January 2018), "Sharon Arroyo Interview"(PDF), The Graduate Student Section, Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 65 (1): 29–30, doi:10.1090/noti1627