He was born in Brussels, Belgium and immigrated with his parents to New York City in 1950 and grew up largely in this city.[1] In 1963, as a senior at the Bronx High School of Science, he won first place in the Westinghouse Science Talent Search for his work on "The Theory of Semi-cyclical Groups with Special Reference to Non-Aristotelian Logic." He then graduated from Columbia University in 1966, winning the Van Amringe Mathematical Prize.[2] He is best known for his "codimension one splitting theorem",[3] which is a standard tool in high-dimensional geometric topology, and a number of important results proven with his collaborator Julius Shaneson (now at the University of Pennsylvania). Their work includes many results in knot theory (and broad generalizations of that subject)[4] and aspects of low-dimensional topology. They gave the first nontrivial examples of topological conjugacy of linear transformations,[5] which led to a flowering of research on the topological study of spaces with singularities.[6]
More recently, they combined their understanding of singularities, first to lattice point counting in polytopes, then to Euler-Maclaurin type summation formulae,[7] and most recently to counting lattice points in the circle.[8] This last problem is a classical one, initiated by Gauss, and the paper is still being vetted by experts.[citation needed]
^Shaneson, Julius (1995), "Characteristic classes, lattice points, and Euler-MacLaurin formulae", Proc. International Congress of Mathematicians, vol 1 (Zurich 1994), Basel, Berlin: Birkhäuser, pp. 612–624.
^Cappell, Sylvain & Shaneson, Julius (2007). "Some problems in number theory I: The Circle Problem". arXiv:math/0702613..