Schedule
Implementation of “ESF-JSPS Frontier Science Conference Series for Young Researchers” in FY 2011
1. Conference Theme
Mathematics for Innovation: Large and Complex Systems
2. Overview
The current trend to a global economy and a knowledge society has placed information and innovation technologies, at the forefront. In almost all industries Mathematics opens the way to virtual experiments, the simulation of multiple scenarios for a given phenomenon and its control and optimization. Moreover, besides its role in science and engineering, the domains of application of mathematics include social, environmental, and economic phenomena. This connection is especially strong in areas where innovation is contributing to the well being of society, such as health, security, communications, and environmental stewardship.
We aim to bring together young researchers from different mathematical research fields to create a foundation for cooperative innovation. Newest developments in areas where mathematical research in modeling, the analysis of models, the simulation, optimization and control of products and processes has a major impact will be discussed and new challenges for future research will be present.
3. Schedule
| Dates : Tuesday, 28 February to Sunday, 4 March 2012 |
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Tuesday, 28 February |
: Registration and Reception |
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Wednesday, 29 February to Saturday, 3 March |
: Sessions, Short talks, and Poster Sessions |
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Sunday, 4 March |
: Departure after breakfast |
| Program |
4. Venue
Tokyo
The Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Chinzan-so
2-10-8 Sekiguchi, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo
5. Co-Chairs
| Japan |
: Yoshiaki Maeda (Faculty of Science and Technology, Keio University) |
| Europe |
: Volker Mehrmann (Technische Universität Berlin, Germany) |
6. Japanese Organizing Committee
Motoko Kotani (Mathematical Institute & WPI-AIMR, Tohoku University)
Tetsuya Sakurai (Department of Computer Science, University of Tsukuba)
Gen Nakamura (Department of Mathematics, Hokkaido University)
7. Speakers
| Japan : |
Kazuyuki Aihara (Institute of Industrial Science, The University of Tokyo)
Hirokazu Anai (Institute of Mathematics for Industry, Kyushu University and Fujitsu Laboratories, Ltd.)
Hideyuki Azegami (Graduate School of Information Science, Nagoya University)
Tadahisa Funaki (Graduate School of Mathematical Sciences, The University of Tokyo)
Masayasu Mimura (Graduate School of Advanced Mathematical Sciences, Meiji University)
Junichi Nakagawa (Advanced Technology Research Laboratories, Nippon Steel Corporation)
Yasumasa Nishiura (Research Institute for Electronic Science, Hokkaido University)
Yosihiko Ogata (Department of Statistical Modeling, Institute of Statistical Mathematics)
Takashi Suzuki (Graduate School of Engineering Science, Osaka University) |
Europe : |
Habib Ammari (École Normale Supérieure, France)
Alfredo Bermudez de Castro (University of Santiago de Compostela, Spain)
Franco Brezzi (Institute for Advanced Study of Pavia, Italy)
Nicole El Karoui (École Polytechnique, France)
Josselin Garnier (University of Paris Diderot, France)
Michael Griebel (University of Bonn and Fraunhofer SCAI, Germany)
Jari Kaipio (University of Eastern Finland, Finland and University of Auckland, New Zealand)
Peter Markowich (University of Cambridge, UK and University of Vienna, Austria)
Roland Potthast (German Meteorological Service, Germany and University of Reading, UK)
Volker Schulz (University of Trier, Germany)
Andrew Stuart (University of Warwick, UK) |
8. Sessions
(1) Disaster Prevention and Risk
(2) Mathematics of New Materials
(3) Optimization in Engineering
(4) Mathematics of Production Engineering
(5) Mathematics in Information Science/Electronics/Visualization
(6) Mathematics in Biology and Life Sciences
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9. Participants
- About 25 Japanese and European researchers respectively
- Young Japanese or European researchers who have obtained a doctoral degree within 10 years prior to the conference or are scheduled to obtain a doctoral degree no later than 18 months after the conference.
- Japanese participants should currently be conducting research at Japanese research institutions including universities.
10. Organizers
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS)
European Science Foundation (ESF)
11. Japanese Cooperating Organizations
The Mathematical Society of Japan
The Japan Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics
12. Expenses
JSPS and ESF will bear the conference, travel and lodging costs.