SIAM AG 17 Proposed Minisymposia

From SIAG-AG

Revision as of 06:11, 15 October 2016 by Serkan Hosten (Talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

Algebraic Methods in Rigidity Theory. Organizers: Jessica Sidman (Mount Holyoke College), Meera Sitharam (University of Florida), Audrey St. John (Mount Holyoke College), and Louis Theran (University of St. Andrews).

Algebraic Vision. Organizer: Rekha Thomas (University of Washington).

Applications of Algebra to Signal Processing and Digital Imaging. Organizers: Cristiano Bocci (University of Siena), Cameron Farnsworth (Yonsei University), Hwangrae Lee (Auburn University) and Luke Oeding (Auburn University).

Applied and Computational Topology. Organizers: Justin Curry (Duke University) and Jose Perea (Michigan State University).

Euclidean Distance Degree. Organizers: Corey Harris (Florida State University) and Martin Helmer (UC Berkeley).

Free Resolutions Governed By Geometric and/or Combinatorial Data. Organizers: Carlos D'Adrea (Universitat de Barcelona) and Florian Enescu (Georgia State University).

Likelihood Geometry. Organizers: Serkan Hosten (San Francisco State University) and Jose Rodriguez (University of Chicago).

Mu Bases. Organizer: Ron Goldman (Rice Universty).

Real Algebraic Geometry and Optimization. Organizers: Thorsten Theobald (University of Frankfurt) and Timo de Wolff (Texas A & M).

Sparse Representations from Moments. Organizers: Bernard Mourrain (INRIA) and Cordian Riener (University of Konstanz).

Statistics and Applied Algebraic Topology. Organizers: Brittany Terese Fasy (Montana State University) and Sayan Mukherjee (Duke University)

Symbolic Combinatiorics. Organizers: Shaoshi Chen (Chinese Academy of Sciences), Manuel Kauers (Johannes Kepler University), Stever Melczer (University of Waterloo), and Michael Singer (North Carolina State University).

Symmetry and Structure in Algebraic Computation. Organizers: Evelyne Hubert (INRIA) and Cordian Riener (University of Konstanz).

Tensors: From Algebra To Applications. Organizers: Elina Robeva (MIT) and Anna Seigal (UC Berkeley).

Views
Personal tools