Coding Theory
From SIAG-AG
Coding Theory comes as an answer to the problem of reliable communication over noisy channels. As a research field, Coding Theory intersects Mathematics, Information Theory, and Electrical Engineering. The minisymposium session we propose focuses on the algebraic aspect of the theory of error-correcting codes, both in the context of Classical Coding Theory and Network Coding, a new emerging research field that studies network transmissions. Algebra plays a crucial role in Coding Theory, as it provides the main tools for the construction of error-correcting codes and their analysis.
[edit] Organizers
- Felice Manganiello (Clemson University, USA)
- Gretchen Matthews (Clemson University, USA)
- Alberto Ravagnani (University of Toronto, Canada)
[edit] Speakers
- Daniel Augot (INRIA Paris, France)
- Maria Bras-Amorós (Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain)
- Eimear Byrne (University College Dublin, Ireland)
- Iwan Duursma (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA)
- Olav Geil (Aalborg University, Denmark)
- Heide Gluesing-Luerssen (University of Kentucky, USA)
- Elisa Gorla (University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland)
- Cem Güneri (Sebanci University, Turkey)
- Felice Manganiello (Clemson University, USA)
- Umberto Martinez-Penas (Aalborg University, Denmark)
- Gretchen Matthews (Clemson University, USA)
- Muriel Médard (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA)
- Piermarco Milione (Aalto University, dFinlan)
- Alberto Ravagnani (University of Toronto, Canada)
- Joachim Rosenthal (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
- Diego Ruano (Aalborg University, Denmark)
- John Sheekey (University College Dublin, Ireland)
- Fernando Torres (University of Campinas, Brasil)