Sydney Harbour JARCS SYDNEY 2017
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Photos JARCS VII

Australian-Japanese Workshop on Real and Complex Singularities

Tzee-Char Kuo 81st birthday

25 September 2017 - 29 September 2017

The University of Sydney
ABS Seminar Room 3003

Speakers:
T. Akahori
H. Anai
M.Barwick
A. Fish
T. Fukui
M. Harre
A. Harris
S. Ishii
S. Koike
T. -C. Kuo
G.Lehrer
Y. Matsui
S. McCallum
K. Nabeshima
O. Saeki
J. Sekiguchi
G. Williamson
O. Yacobi
S. Yau

Organisers:
Laurentiu Paunescu
Adam Harris
Alexander Isaev
Scott McCallum
Florica Cirstea
Michael Harre
Satoshi Koike
Toshizumi Fukui

The Australian-Japanese Workshop on Real and Complex Singularities is an initiative towards the further advance of scientific exchange between Australian and Japanese researchers, and is made possible with the support of the University of Sydney, School of Mathematics and Statistics, the Mathematical Sciences Institute - ANU and the AMSI. The scientific programme will be based around a series of expository lectures presented by the invited speakers, each of whom is an internationally recognised expert in an area of mathematics having substantial interactions with the contemporary theory of singularities in real and complex geometry. Each invited speaker will be asked to present lectures on a topic of current interest, but in a manner which is accessible to non-experts in the field. The central aims of the workshop are:

(1) to promote interaction between Australian and Japanese mathematicians, specifically in the field of singularity theory;

(2) to provide an opportunity for young mathematicians in all parts of Australia to broaden their awareness of contemporary mathematics at an international level in a relaxed and relatively informal atmosphere.

This year we plan to hold a five-day workshop at the University of Sydney, with applications in two types of complex systems which have come to the forefront of applied science in recent decades:

a) The development of robotic algorithms for image processing and complex machine learning, and

b) Computational methods developed in connection with decision theory and complex systems.

The organisers wish to extend a particular welcome to postgraduate, early postdoctoral and to women participants.

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For more information, please contact laurent@maths.usyd.edu.au
     Last modified: Thu Oct 5 15:54:19 AEDT 2017