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David Rosenthal is Professor and Chair of the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science at St. John's University in Queens, New York, a position he has held since joining the institution in 2004. He received his B.S. in Mathematics in 1996, M.A. in Mathematics in 1998, and Ph.D. in Mathematics in 2002 from the State University of New York at Binghamton. Rosenthal's research focuses on algebraic and geometric topology as well as coarse geometry. In recognition of his scholarly contributions, he was awarded the J. William Fulbright Scholars Award for a research appointment at the University of Münster in Germany from January 16 to July 15, 2010. His academic career emphasizes rigorous exploration of topics at the intersection of topology, group theory, and K-theory, evidenced by his extensive publication record and international invitations to speak.
Rosenthal has published extensively in leading mathematical journals. Key works include 'Finitely F-amenable actions and decomposition complexity of groups' with Andrew Nicas in Groups, Geometry and Dynamics (2020), 'Regular finite decomposition complexity' with Daniel Kasprowski and Andrew Nicas in Journal of Topology and Analysis (2019), 'Hyperbolic dimension and decomposition complexity' with Andrew Nicas in Topological Methods in Group Theory (2018), 'On the K-theory and L-theory of hyperbolic and virtually finitely generated abelian groups' with Wolfgang Lück in Forum Mathematicum (2014), and 'On the algebraic K- and L-theory of word hyperbolic groups' with Dirk Schütz in Mathematische Annalen (2005). He co-authored the undergraduate textbook A Readable Introduction to Real Mathematics, Second Edition (Springer, 2018), with Daniel Rosenthal and Peter Rosenthal. Additional publications appear in Topology and Its Applications, Pure and Applied Mathematics Quarterly, and Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society. Rosenthal maintains an active presence in the mathematical community through invited lectures at prestigious venues, including the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, University of Bonn, McMaster University, Fields Institute, and CUNY Graduate Center, spanning topics in coarse geometry, assembly maps, and decomposition complexity.

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