Jacqueline Akinpelu

Jacqueline Akinpelu
Born
Jacqueline McKinney
EducationDuke University (BA, 1975)
John Hopkins University (PhD, 1980)
Awards2011 Diversity Award, 2017 Heritage Award
Scientific career
Fieldsmathematics
InstitutionsBell Labs
Johns Hopkins University
ThesisOptimal Multi-Product Scheduling on One Machine Over a Finite Horizon (1980)
Academic advisorsEliezer Naddor

Jacqueline M. Akinpelu (born 1953,[1] née McKinney) is an American applied mathematician and operations researcher who worked at Bell Labs on network performance under overloaded conditions, and later, as a research manager at the Applied Physics Laboratory of Johns Hopkins University, developed a pipeline for students from Morgan State University to mentor them into careers in STEM fields.[2]

Early life and education

Akinpelu is African-American, and originally from Winston-Salem, North Carolina, where she was raised by a poor single mother in the 1960s. She was educated in the public school system there, and majored in mathematics at Duke University, graduating magna cum laude in 1975.[2]

She completed her doctorate in 1980, from the Johns Hopkins University Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics, with the dissertation Optimal Multi-Product Scheduling on One Machine Over a Finite Horizon supervised by Eliezer Naddor.[3][4] Her doctoral research related to inventory management in operations research.[2]

Career and later life

Akinpelu became a researcher at Bell Labs in 1980, and continued to work there and its successor, AT&T Labs, for 25 years. Her early work there involved network performance under overloaded conditions,[2][5] and signaling protocols in voice networks. Her later work at Bell was as a manager for the planning and maintenance of AT&T's long distance telephone network,[2] as head of the Network Capacity Operation Systems Planning Department.[6] She was also influential in recruiting members of disadvantaged groups to AT&T,[1] and was an advocate for considering the different needs and characteristics of different ethnic and national groups rather than lumping them all together.[6]

In 2006, she moved to the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, starting as a performance engineer and assistant group supervisor,[7] and later becoming an assistant branch supervisor. There, she built an outreach and mentoring program with Morgan State University, connecting students there to STEM careers,[2] before eventually retiring.[8]

Recognition

In 2009, she was honored in Women of Color magazine as a recipient of the 2009 Women of Color Technology Award for Career Achievement in Government.[7][1]

Johns Hopkins University gave her their 2011 Diversity Award,[9] and the Johns Hopkins Alumni Association gave her their 2017 Heritage Award.[10]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Jacqueline Akinpelu (b. 1953)" (PDF), EvenQuads project, Association for Women in Mathematics, August 2023, retrieved 2025-06-19
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Jacqueline Akinpelu", Black History Month 2019 Honorees, Mathematically Gifted & Black, February 5, 2019, retrieved 2025-06-19
  3. ^ Jacqueline Akinpelu at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  4. ^ "Dissertations", Johns Hopkins Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics, Johns Hopkins Whiting School of Engineering, retrieved 2025-06-19
  5. ^ Akinpelu, J. M. (September 1984), "The overload performance of engineered networks with nonhierarchical and hierarchical routing", Bell Laboratories Technical Journal, 63 (7): 1261–1281, doi:10.1002/j.1538-7305.1984.tb00036.x
  6. ^ a b "Chapter 2: Barriers for Women in Corporate Culture", Women Scientists and Engineers Employed in Industry: Why So Few?, Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 1994, pp. 40–41, doi:10.17226/2264, ISBN 978-0-309-04991-7
  7. ^ a b "Congratulations to Dr. Jacqueline Akinpelu", Women of Color, p. 16, Fall 2009, retrieved 2025-06-19
  8. ^ Mountie Math Role Models, Mt. San Antonio College, retrieved 2025-06-19
  9. ^ "2011 Diversity Awards", Diversity at JHU, Johns Hopkins University, retrieved 2025-06-19
  10. ^ Heritage Award 2017, Johns Hopkins Alumni Association, retrieved 2025-06-19