Applied and Computational Topology: ATMCS 5

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Applied and Computational Topology: ATMCS 5

 02 - 06 Jul 2012

ICMS

Scientific Organisers

  • Gunnar Carlsson, Stanford University
  • Frederic Chazal, INRIA Saclay
  • Michael Farber, Queen Mary University of London
  • Robert Ghrist, University of Pennsylvania
  • Rick Jardine, University of Western Ontario
  • Konstantin Mischaikow, State University of New Jersey
  • Mikael Vejdemo-Johansson, University of St Andrews

About:

ATMCS 5 was the fifth conference in a conference series on Algebraic Topology, its role in Computer Science and its applications. Previous conferences in the series were:

  1. ATCMS 2001 - Stanford, USA
  2. ATCMS 2004 - London, Canada
  3. ATMCS 2008 - Paris, France
  4. ATCMS 2010 - Münster, Germany

Speakers and their talk titles

Michal Adamaszek, University of Warwick - Homology and Vomplexity  

Matthew Arnold, University of Bristol - Statistical Aspects of Persistent Homology  

Michael Atiyah, University of Edinburgh - Analysis, Combinatorics and Computation    

David Balduzzi, Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems - An Information-Theoretic Presheaf for Distributed Learning 

Ulrich Bauer, Institute of Science and Technology Austria - Opological Simplification Problems 

Jean-Daniel Boissonnat, INRIA - Delaunay-Type Structures for Manifolds  

Frederic Chazal, INRIA Saclay - Detection and Approximation of Linear Structures in Metric Spaces

Daniel Cohen, Louisiana State University - Topological Complexity of Hyperplane Complements

Justin Curry, University of Pennsylvania - Cosheaves and Dualities in Generalized Sensor Networks

Vin de Silva, Pomona College - Persistent Cohomology and Circle-Valued Functions

Pawel Dlotko, Jagiellonian University - Computational (Co)Homology – Applications and Recent Progress in Computations 
Herbert Edelsbrunner, Institute of Science and Technology Austria - Adaptive Triangulation of a Digital Image   

Lisbeth Fajstrup, Aalborg University - Periodicity and the Trace Space Algorithm

Peter Franek, Czech Technical University - Topological Degree Computation Based on Interval Arithmetic   

Jesus Gonzalez, Center for Research and Advanced Studies - Immersion Dimension and Topological Complexity of Projective Product Spaces

Eric Goubault, CEA LIST - Recent Advances in Directed Algebraic Topology, with Applications to Concurrent and Distributed Systems    

Leonidas Guibas, Stanford University - Understanding Shapes Through Mappings

SangEon Han, Chonbuk National University - A New Type of Locally Finite Topological Space and its Applications  

Giseon Heo, University of Alberta - Topological Analysis of Variance with Applications in Landmark Data Set

Yasuaki Hiraoka, Kyushu University - Applications of Persistent Diagrams to Protein Compressibility and Phylogenetic Trees

Tomasz Kaczynski, Université de Sherbrooke - Suspension of a Measuring Function  

Matthew Kahle, Ohio State University - The Topological Signature of Randomness

Miroslav Kramar, Rutgers University - The Dynamics of Granular Materials

Marek Krcal, Charles University - Computing All Maps Into a Sphere 

Sanjeevi Krishnan, University of Pennsylvania - Poincaré Duality and Linear Optimization

Claudia Landi, Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia - Uniqueness of Models in Persistent Homology   

Nati Linial, Hebrew University of Jerusalem - Graphs as "Model Organisms" for Topologists  

Carl McTague, University of Southampton - A New Approach to Euler Calculus for Continuous Integrands  

Facundo Mémoli, University of Adelaide - Metric Geometry and Persistent Topology

Marian Mrozek, Jagiellonian University - Homological Persistence of Maps

Sayan Mukherjee, Duke University - Probability Measures on the Space of Persistence Diagrams   

Daniel Müllner, Stanford University - Consistent Scale Selection for Exploratory Visualization and Analysis of Data Sets

Monica Nicolau, Stanford University - Unraveling the Biology of Disease Through Data Transformations and Topological Data Analysis

Yuli Rudyak, University of Florida - On Higher Topological Complexity and Configuration Spaces

Dirk Schuetz, Durham University - Homology of Moduli Spaces of Linkages in High-Dimensional Euclidean Space  

Stephen Smale, City University of Hong Kong - Topology and Immunology

Andrzej Szymczak, Colorado School of Mines - Piecewise Constant Vector Field Topology  

Dai Tamaki, Shinshu University - A Salvetti-Type Model for Configuration Spaces

Francesco Vaccarino, Politecnico di Torino - Minimal Resolutions of Graded Modules and Multi Bar Codes

Hubert Wagner, Jagiellonian University/IST Austria - Computational Topology in Text Mining  

Rien van de Weijgaert, Groningen University - The Geometry and Topology of the Cosmic Web  

Shmuel Weinberger, University of Chicago - Disordered Solids and the Dynamics of Bounded Geometry