Robert Riley (mathematician)
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Robert F. Riley (December 22, 1935–March 4, 2000[1]) was an American mathematician. He is known for his work in low-dimensional topology using computational tools and hyperbolic geometry, being one of the inspirations for William Thurston's later breakthroughs in 3-dimensional topology.[2]
Riley earned a bachelor's degree in mathematics from MIT in 1957; shortly thereafter he dropped out of the graduate program and went on to work in industry, eventually moving to Amsterdam in 1966. In 1968 he took a temporary position at the University of Southampton.[3] He defended his Ph.D. at this institution in 1980, under the nominal direction of David Singerman.[4] For the next two years he occupied a postdoctoral position in Boulder where William Thurston was employed at the time, before moving on to Binghamton University as a professor.[3]