Submit an Entry
The Mathematics Calendar, hosted by the American Mathematical Society, serves as a comprehensive resource offering information about upcoming mathematical events, conferences, workshops, seminars, and related activities around the world. We host this platform so that mathematicians, researchers, educators, students, and enthusiasts can stay informed about upcoming opportunities for networking, professional development, and collaboration within the mathematical community.
If you need to make changes to your Mathematics Calendar entry or have any questions, feel free to email us. Please note that contact names and email addresses will not be included in the published event information.
The "Anomalous Mathematical Patterns Sci-Art Contest" invites all artists who like maths and all mathematicians who like art, to submit their artwork at the webpage https://sites.google.com/view/anomalousmathematicalpatterns/home. The sci-art art contest is open to all artists worldwide who are 18 years or older, and will be running till the 31st of March 2025, at 23:59 GMT. There are many prizes to be won (up to £750 each), and there is a planned exhibition for the winners in May - June 2025 at the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Research. The sci-art art contest is sponsored by the Heilbronn Institute of Mathematical Research and by the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences. For more information on some of the themes of this exciting contest, see also https://plus.maths.org/content/calling-all-maths-friendly-artists.
Seminars The Theoretical Computer Science and Discrete Mathematics Seminars will take place every Monday at 10:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. and every Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. at the Institute for Advanced Study. The lectures will be held in S-101, the seminar room in Simonyi Hall, unless stated otherwise. If you are interested in attending future seminars and are not already on our mailing list from previous years, please send an e-mail to Andrea Lass and ask to be added. alass email
The Theoretical Computer Science and Discrete Mathematics Seminars will take place every Monday at 10:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. and every Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. at the Institute for Advanced Study. The lectures will be held in S-101, the seminar room in Simonyi Hall, unless stated otherwise. If you are interested in attending future seminars and are not already on our mailing list from previous years, please send an e-mail to Andrea Lass and ask to be added.
The program will integrate diverse fields of discrete mathematics, geometry, theoretical computer science, mathematical biology, and statistical and soft matter physics. Various workshops will be designed to attract both theoretical and applied practitioners and to stimulate the cross-fertilization of ideas between these disparate communities.
The S.-T. Yau College Student Mathematics Contest, initiated by Prof. Shing-Tung Yau in 2010, reaches its 16th edition in 2025 with the first global expansion. Hosted by Tsinghua University's Yau Mathematical Sciences Center, this competition has attracted over 25,000 participants from 600+ universities in China with 980+ awardees honored. In 2025, the competition expands internationally, setting up test centers in the USA (California-Los Angeles, Berkeley; New Jersey-New Brunswick; Massachusetts-Boston; Texas-Houston), Russia (Moscow, Saint Petersburg), Japan (Tokyo), and Singapore. It is open to undergraduate students worldwide who have not yet obtained a bachelor's degree. Registration runs from March 15 to April 15, 2025. The semifinal written examination will take place on May 17-18, 2025. The global finals will be held at Tsinghua University in Beijing from June 28-29. For more information, please visit yau-contest.com or contact college-contest@tsinghua.edu.cn.
Welcome to NIMS2025, proudly hosted by Momentera! We're thrilled to invite you to the Conference on New Innovations in Material Science, taking place from March 24-26, 2025, in the beautiful city of Prague, Czech Republic. Theme of the conference: "Future directions and challenges in material science"
Welcome to NIMS2025, proudly hosted by Momentera! We're thrilled to invite you to the Conference on New Innovations in Material Science, taking place from March 24-26, 2025, in the beautiful city of Prague, Czech Republic. Theme of the conference: "Future directions and challenges in material science".
Cancer Research Summit 2025 - Global Edition is scheduled to take place on March 27-28, 2025, in Boston, USA. Cancer Research Summit 2025 will bring together leading researchers, oncologists, and professionals in the field of cancer research to discuss the latest advancements, challenges, and future directions in cancer treatment and prevention.
The Digital Health 2025 Conference is a forward-looking event that explores the intersection of technology, healthcare, and innovation, focusing on the transformation of healthcare systems by digital solutions. Scheduled for 2025, the conference will gather industry leaders, healthcare professionals, and technology innovators to discuss the latest advancements and future trends in digital health
The Hanseatic Dynamical Systems Days (HanDSDays) are recurring one-day workshops taking place at universities in Northern Germany. The goal of the workshop is to enhance connections, collaborations and exchange of ideas within the Dynamical Systems & Ergodic Theory community. The 11th HanDSDay will take place at the University of Bremen at March 28th, 2025. For more information: https://sites.google.com/view/handsdays11
The NYSMATYC annual spring conference is a chance for math educators and students get together across New York State to share ideas.
The 2025 Spring Central Sectional Meeting runs for two days, with three invited addresses and as many special sessions as time and space allows. The sectional meeting also includes social events and opportunities to shop at the on-site AMS Bookstore.
The Ohio River Analysis Meeting (ORAM) is an annual event jointly sponsored by mathematicians at the University of Cincinnati and the University of Kentucky highlighting research in analysis and partial differential equations. The weekend meeting features invited speakers and contributed talks. There will be contributed talks, with priority given to early-career mathematicians and those from underrepresented groups. Travel support is available through a grant from the National Science Foundation. ORAM 14 will be held at the University of Cincinnati. Please see the website for an archive of past ORAM programs, a list of invited speakers, registration, and other details.
The conference aims to stimulate interactions between highly active topics in mathematics such as higher structures and their applications in TQFT and CFT, the geometry of moduli spaces with their applications in SUSY QFT and string theory like the swampland program, and integrability with its multitude of applications in quantum field theory and string theory.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, will be devoted to investigating new research directions within G2 geometry. Certain topics have by now been intensely studied: the construction of new holonomy G2 manifolds, submanifold geometry, gauge theory, geometric invariants and geometric flows. Across the years, however, many other promising directions have been suggested but await deeper investigation. The main topics for this workshop are: (1) New developments in G2 mirror symmetry. (2) Topological methods and formality in G2 geometry. (3) Loop spaces and non-associative gauge theory. (4) G2 function theory and G2 mappings.
The primary mission of the Underrepresented Students in Topology and Algebra Research Symposium (USTARS) is to showcase the excellent research conducted by underrepresented students studying topology and algebra. Dedicated to furthering the success of underrepresented students, USTARS seeks to broaden the participation in the mathematical sciences by cultivating research and mentoring networks. USTARS is open to all people interested in the topological and algebraic fields.
Girls' Adventures in Math (GAIM) is an annual math competition for 3rd-8th grade girls, created by the math olympiad winning staff at Math-M-Addicts. GAIM presents competition problems in the form of a comic book following the stories of four pioneering women from history. Teams of four compete in one of two divisions, Elementary and Middle, to face some of the most challenging and innovative math problems available to students in their age group. The 2025 GAIM competition will be an online competition, open to girls anywhere in the world!
The 2025 Spring Eastern Sectional Meeting hosted by the University of Connecticut will take place at the Connecticut Convention Center and Hartford Marriott Downtown, Hartford, CT. The sectional meeting also includes social events and opportunities to shop at the on-site AMS Bookstore.
In recent years techniques from harmonic analysis viz. projection theorems have found striking applications in finitary analysis on homogenous spaces. Such quantitative results have many potential applications to analytic number theory. This workshop will bring together researchers in these areas to further explore these connections.
The geometric arrangement of a material's constituents plays an important role in governing its behavior. Concepts from discrete mathematics to describe these geometric arrangements, including notions of rigidity and flexibility, can bring fundamental insight into how a material might respond to stress, be designed, be reconfigured, etc. Beyond materials, the notions of network rigidity can be applied to more abstract networks and geometries, such as those found in data science. This workshop aims to build connections between the field of mathematical rigidity theory, other topics in applied mathematics, and related areas of science and engineering.
The 3rd International Mathematics and Statistics Student Research Symposium (IMSSRS) will be held virtually on Saturday, April 12, 2025. IMSSRS is a free conference welcoming high school, community college, undergraduate, and graduate students to present their mathematics and statistics research, explore current research topics, and connect with like-minded enthusiasts. This year's program features a keynote address by Dr. Susan Goldstine (St. Mary's College of Maryland) on "The Long and Winding Road to Non-Euclidean Geometry." There will also be a panel discussion on "Life After College," exploring career options for mathematical science graduates, with opportunities for audience Q&A. Abstract submission and registration deadlines are March 28. While presenters must be students, all are welcome to attend. Visit the event website for more details and share the experience with fellow students and colleagues.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, will be devoted to exploring the theory of some nonlinear partial differential equations that appear as fundamental models in statistical mechanics and mathematical physics. The workshop will bring together mathematicians working at the forefront of these two lines of research with junior researchers to focus on advancing specific open problems.
The 6th Conference on Mathematical Science and Applications (6th CMSA 2025), organized by the Saudi Association for Mathematical Sciences (SAMS), will be held at King Saud University, Riyadh, from April 15 to 17, 2025. This biennial conference aims to showcase cutting-edge research in pure and applied mathematics, foster interdisciplinary collaboration, and provide a platform for knowledge exchange among researchers, educators, and industry professionals. Key objectives include exploring mathematical applications in various fields, addressing global challenges, and strengthening academic and industry partnerships. The event will feature keynote speeches, panel discussions, paper presentations, and networking opportunities for young and established researchers.
In a growing number of applications, one needs to analyze and interpret data coming from massive networks. The statistical problems arising from such applications lead to important mathematical challenges: building novel probabilistic models, understanding the possibilities and limitations for statistical detection and inference, designing efficient algorithms, and understanding the inherent limitations of fast algorithms.
We are organizing an international meeting around the general theme of "Families of K"ahler spaces". The event will take place from 21 to 25 Apr 2025 at the CIRM of Marseille (France); more information is available on the official webpage : https://conferences.cirm-math.fr/3221.html. The conference will consists of a dozen research talks and two mini-courses by S'andor Kov'acs (U. of Washington) and Claire Voisin (CNRS & Sorbonne Universit'e). The deadline for preregistrations is 14 Feb, 2025. Accommodation and meals at CIRM will be covered for all participants, who will however need to find their own funding for their travel expenses. We should still be able to have limited additional funding for some participants: we strongly encourage applications from young researchers (PhD students, postdocs).
Patient Safety Congress 2025 aims to discover advances in health practice opportunities and challenges for the nursing community, management and education in relation to health disparities as well as a breadth of other topics.
Welcome to the 38th World Summit on Positive Psychology, Happiness, Mindfulness, and Wellness! Join us on April 23-24, 2025, in the captivating city of Paris, France, for an extraordinary exchange of ideas with prominent experts from around the globe. We've meticulously organized this summit to encompass keynote speeches, oral presentations, workshops, poster presentations, panel discussions, exhibitions, Young Researcher Forums (YRF), B2B meetings, audio-video presentations, virtual sessions, and prestigious awards including the Best Poster Award, Best Speaker Award, and Best Abstract Award.
Iris Scientific Group is pleased to unveil the forthcoming "3rd International Nursing Networking Conference (INNC-2025)," slated for April 23-25, 2025, to be held both in Las Vegas, USA, and in virtual format.
This congress is a multidisciplinary platform that brings together academicians, industry leaders, researchers, and experts to explore the latest advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) and data science, covering a wide range of topics, including mathematics, new methods in AI, and AI applications in engineering, health, education, law, marketing and finance, textile, city and regional planning.
Affine Lie Algebras, Quantum Groups, and Their Representations is a workshop supported by the Croatian Science Foundation under the installation research project Quantum Current Algebras and Their Representation Theory. The workshop topics include all areas related to the representation theory of affine Lie algebras and quantum groups, such as combinatorial identities, quantum vertex algebras, etc.
We will have talks and tutorials that introduce mathematicians to Lean and to state-of-the-art technologies in automated theorem proving. We will also discuss future research directions, tooling, and more.
The symposium will feature two keynote talks, 10 invited talks in two parallel sessions - one in Pure Math and one in Applied Math/Statistics, a panel discussion, and a poster session. If you are interested in presenting a poster, please make your request by March 15, 2025, for full consideration. Requests to contribute a poster can be made on the registration page. NSF funding is available to support the participation of undergraduate and graduate students, postdocs, and those without other sources of support. Members of under-represented groups are especially encouraged to apply. Funding requests can be made on the registration page. The deadline for full consideration for funding is February 15, 2025.
MORE: Mathematics - Opportunities in Research and Education brings together undergraduate students interested in mathematics to learn about opportunities in research and education. The participants will attend plenary lectures featuring cutting-edge mathematical research by leading mathematicians; interact with faculty, graduate students and postdocs through related activities; and attend panels on research, applying for summer opportunities and graduate school, and pathways to mathematical careers.
Join the 8th European Food Science Congress on April 28-29, 2025, in Paris to explore cutting-edge advancements in food science, safety, and production with global experts and industry leaders.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, will be devoted to interactions between homological stability and asymptotic questions in number theory over function fields. In recent years, homological stability of suitable Hurwitz spaces has been used to make great progress on function field cases of Cohen-Lenstra heuristics (Ellenberg-Venkatesh-Westerland), Malle's conjecture (Ellenberg-Tran-Westerland), the Conrey-Farmer-Keating-Rubinstein-Snaith predictions (Bergstr\"{o}m-Diaconu-Petersen-Westerland, Miller-Patzt-Petersen-Randal-Williams), and heuristics on Selmer ranks (Ellenberg-Landesman). The goal of the workshop is to bring together researchers both from analytic number theory and topology, and to further explore the connections between the two fields.
The conference will be held at the beautiful and easily accessible Conference Centre Aston in Birmingham and will showcase activities from across all areas of OR. We welcome contributions that are empirically motivated and with a focus on application, as well as those that are theoretically driven. The conference will host plenaries from leading international experts, sessions of themed talks, as well as poster sessions, and will provide plenty of opportunities for networking. We look forward to seeing you in Birmingham in April 2025 for a terrific event and to celebrate together the successes of OR!
This meeting is sponsored by the SIAM Activity Group on Data Science.
The Workshop "MMAS'25: Mathematical Modeling, Analysis and Simulation of Real-World Problems" will be held on May 2-3, 2025 at Zonguldak Bulent Ecevit University in Turkiye. The event is organized in honour of Professor Masahiro Yamamoto from the Graduate School of Mathematical Sciences, the University of Tokyo. The workshop will focus on recent advances and possible future directions in the following topics: i-Mathematical Analysis for Fractional Differential Equations ii-Inverse and Ill-posed Problems of Mathematical Physics iii-Industrial Mathematics: Scientific Computing and Algorithms MMAS'25 will be organized in a hybrid format, allowing for both face-to-face and online participation. For more information and registration, please visit our website: https://mmas.beun.edu.tr/
The 2025 Spring Western Sectional Meeting runs for two days, with invited addresses and as many special sessions as time and space allows. The sectional meeting also includes social events and opportunities to shop at the on-site AMS Bookstore.
The workshop will focus on the theory of differential equations and their applications to natural, health and social sciences, as well as engineering. We wish to provide a platform to continue the discussions, address questions and problems that arose online, communicate the latest results in the theory of differential equations, and exchange ideas between different research centres. We hope to finalize research projects initiated at the seminars and establish long-lasting collaborations to work on new projects. We envisage significant participation of postgraduate students and emerging researchers who will benefit from plenary and invited lectures of leading scientists in the field and will be able to present their research in the form of contributed talks and poster presentations.
This workshop capitalizes on the significant potential for mutual advancement in uncertainty quantification (UQ) and mathematical biology through cross-disciplinary collaboration. Bringing together UQ practitioners and mathematical biologists will allow UQ methodologies to be applied to explore and improve biological models through computational methods. Conversely, the unique challenges of modeling uncertainty in biological systems can inspire the development of novel UQ techniques. By fostering research collaborations at the intersection of computational and mathematical biology, UQ algorithms, and data-driven learning, this workshop aims to galvanize advancements across these fields.
The conferences Applications of Logic in Philosophy and the Foundations of Mathematics are designed as annuary, interdisciplinary meetings of philosophers, mathematicians and a wide spectrum of researchers whose interests are in the area of pure or applied logic. Held since 1996, it is always located in Sudety Mountains and its organizers are Department of Logic and Methodology of Sciences, Wroclaw University, Institute of Mathematics, University of Silesia in Katowice and Department of Mathematics, Opole University. In 2024 the conference organizers have also been joined by Department of Logic and Methodology of Sciences, University of Łódź, Department of Logic, Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, and Department of Logic and Cognitive Science, Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań. The event is being held under the patronage of Polish Association for Logic and Philosophy of Science.
Organisers: Charlotte Chan (University of Michigan), Thomas Lam (University of Michigan), and Geordie Williamson (University of Sydney) A special semester on "Modern Perspectives in Representation Theory" at the Sydney Mathematical Research Institute from May 5 through June 13, 2025. As part of the program, we are planning two workshops, in Week 3 May 19-23 and Week 5 June 2-6. The aim will be a focused program on several aspects of interest in representation theory. Focuses include: Total positivity Representation theory of p-adic groups and emerging geometric methods Combinatorics of Coxeter groups and Kazhdan-Lutsztig theory
Mathematics is often viewed as one of the main tools responsible for scientific progress, and developments in mathematics are behind some of society’s most significant technological advancements. More recently, mathematicians have increasingly been addressing issues of quantitative justice in their research, their teaching, and their institutions. Quantitative justice is a field that uses the tools of mathematics to interrogate and address the inequities faced by marginalized communities. This workshop is a part of that movement and will bring together mathematicians, statisticians, computer scientists, STEM educators, and members of the general public interested in using the tools of these disciplines to critically examine and address fairness and disparities in society. The goal of the 2025 Workshop on Mathematics and Justice is to extend our explorations of how the mathematical sciences plays a central role in today's movement for quantitative justice. This workshop will take place, May 7-9, 2025, at SLMath in Berkeley, CA. The themes for this year’s workshop are 1) science and technology studies, 2) law and policy, and 3) mathematics education.
The 9th International Arab Conference on Mathematics and Computations (IACMC 2025) will take place at Zarqa University from May 7-9, 2025. This biennial event, first held in 2006, brings together mathematicians to discuss advancements in theoretical and applied mathematics, as well as statistics. Participants are warmly welcomed, with the promise of a rewarding and enjoyable stay in Jordan.
We are delighted to announce the International Conference on Non-linear Analysis and Optimization (ICAN-OPT_NEPAL_2025), from May 8 to 10, 2025, at Kathmandu University, Dhulikhel, Nepal including a Workshop on Fixed Point Theory and Applications. This event is organized by Kathmandu University in collaboration with Tribhuvan University, Nepal Sanskrit University, and Nepal Mathematical Society. This conference will cover diverse topics like Non-linear Analysis, Fixed Point Theory, Operator Theory, Complex Analysis, Harmonic Analysis, Wavelet Analysis, Special Functions, Functional Analysis, Fourier Analysis, Numerical Analysis, Convex Analysis, Optimization Theory, Queueing Theory, Finance & Economics, Differential Equations, Mathematical Biology, Mathematical Modelling, Data Science, and Machine Learning.
This workshop aims to gather experts across many disciplines of fluid mechanics to discuss recent research breakthroughs and equip the next generation of researchers.
This is the conference of the SIAM Activity Group on Dynamical Systems.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, will be devoted to building a foundational understanding of algorithmic stability, and developing rigorous tools for measuring stability that can characterize the behavior of machine learning algorithms. We aim to bring together researchers across a broad range of fields to develop a unified theoretical foundation for algorithmic stability. The main topics for the workshop are: - Building an understanding of the relationships between, and strengths and limitations of, different frameworks and definitions of stability. - The role of algorithmic stability in overparameterized learning models, both in theory and in practice. - Statistical tools for quantifying stability and stabilizing learning algorithms. - Building a shared theoretical framework to bridge the gap between differential privacy and stability.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, will focus on the creation of open educational resources (OERs) in the mathematical sciences. A primary goal will be to help those who wish to create OERs learn the powerful new tools that are available for doing so. Participants are encouraged to apply as part of a team of up to three colleagues from the same institution and should apply with a particular project in mind. Projects should be ambitious but able to be completed within one year of the date of the workshop.
This workshop will bring together low-dimensional topologists of all backgrounds to further the general knowledge of link theory within the low-dimensional topology community, including techniques and tools used to study links and important open questions connected to link theory. In particular, the workshop will highlight how computation interacts with current research in link theory. The workshop will also provide a space for new collaborations to develop and promote a supportive and inclusive environment within the community of researchers.
The 37th International Conference on Mental Health and Psychiatry, held in the vibrant city of Paris, France, on May 14-15, 2025 for leading experts, researchers, and practitioners from around the world to explore the advancements in mental health and psychiatry. Theme is Youth and Mental Health: Innovative Strategies for a Changing Generation.
A conference in the areas of number theory and combinatorics
This event will bring together renowned researchers, academics, and practitioners from around the globe to discuss the latest advances in dynamical systems and control theory and their diverse applications across scientific and engineering domains.
We would like to invite you to the upcoming conference "6th International Conference on Applied Microbiology" Which is going to be held on May 15-16, 2025 in London, UK. You can join us as a Speaker/Delegate/Exhibitor/colleague/Student/Poster presenter to share your hard work with renowned speakers and new learners as well. It is a platform for many young researchers to associate with highly skilled professionals to learn about the efforts and works of their lifetime. For further information and registration, visit: https://appliedmicrobes.conferenceseries.com/
This workshop is designed for faculty, postdocs, and PhD students who are interested in teaching statistics and data science through an interdisciplinary approach that leverages the strengths of both applied mathematics and statistics. Participants will exchange pedagogical ideas, curricula, and research applications, fostering collaboration between those teaching data science. The workshop is especially relevant for statistics faculty looking to expand their data science toolbox and applied mathematicians aiming to equip their students with essential data science skills. The workshop is also open to individuals in engineering, epidemiology, computer science and other STEM or public health fields.
The conference will focus on several aspects of constructive function theory, including orthogonal polynomials, potential theory, discrete and continuous energy problems, special functions, polynomial inequalities, as well as various problems relating to optimization and efficiency. The aim is to stimulate collaboration and the exchange of ideas. Early-career researchers (including students) as well as women and members of underrepresented groups are especially encouraged to attend. The conference will highlight Doron Lubinsky as Shanks lecturer and honor Ed Saff on the occasion of his 80th birthday.
This conference is organized around topics in harmonic analysis, linear and nonlinear partial differential equations, geometric measure theory, and scattering theory.
BLAST 2025 is the 15th conference in the series focusing on B = Boolean algebra, L = Lattices, algebraic Logic, A = universal Algebra, S = Set theory, T = set-theoretic and point-free Topology.
The Department of Mathematics, National Institute of Technology Jamshedpur (NIT Jamshedpur) is proud to organize the Workshop on MATLAB and PYTHON Programming (MPP-2025) in online / virtual mode during May 19-23, 2025. The main objective of MPP 2025 is to make the participants understand about MATLAB and PYTHON programming. The program will also include Hands on Sessions. Most of the major concepts of MATLAB and PYTHON programming will be covered during this workshop.
The 2025 Georgia International Topology Conference https://topology.franklinresearch.uga.edu/2025GITC will take place May 19 - May 30, 2025 at the University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia. This will be the ninth in a series of octennial conferences at the University of Georgia that started in 1961. We ask all participants to register at the website.
The conference is organized by the Faculty of Railways, Roads and Bridges and the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Faculty of Civil, Industrial and Agricultural Buildings, Technical University of Civil Engineering Bucharest. This is the 7-th edition of the conferences RIGA, previously organized in 2007, 2008, 2011, 2014, 2021, 2023 by the University of Bucharest, the Transilvania University of Brasov, the Romanian Academy, the Technical University of Civil Engineering Bucharest.
Minicourses: Xue Mei Li (Imperial College London and EPFL Lausanne) Long range dependent noise in Stochastic Differential Equations and Stochastic Partial Differential Equations Stefano Pagliarani (Bologna) McKean-Vlasov type SDEs and related PDEs: kinetic models and low-regularity coefficients Liam Solus (KTH Stockholm) Graphical Models and Algebraic Statistics.
This conference aims to expose graduate students in algebra, geometry, and topology to current research, and provide them with an opportunity to present and discuss their own research. It also intends to provide a forum for graduate students to engage with each other as well as expert faculty members in their areas of research. Most of the talks at the conference will be given by graduate students, with four given by distinguished keynote speakers.
The CSHPM will hold its 2025 Annual Meeting in Toronto at George Brown College in conjunction with the 2025 Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences. Talks are welcome for a Special Session on Conceptual Change in Mathematics and a General Session on all topics relevant to the history or philosophy of mathematics. Send a title and abstract by 1 February 2025 to Nicolas Fillion (nfillion@sfu.ca, Special Session) or Amy Ackerberg-Hastings and Robert E. Bradley (aackerbe@verizon.net and bradley@adelphi.edu, General Session). Register to attend and book accommodations with the Congress, https://www.federationhss.ca/en/congress2025.
`Spring School on Analysis 2025: Function Spaces and Applications XIII' aims to bring together researchers with a common interest in the field. Graduate students and others beginning their mathematical careers are encouraged to participate. There will be opportunities for informal discussions and short communications. The main program will consist of invited lecture courses delivered by Bernhard Ruf (University of Milan), Armin Schikorra (University of Pittsburgh), and Nages Shanmugalingam (University of Cincinnati). There will also be a limited number of short talks.
The EDGE Summer Program is a four-week, residential session designed to prepare a cohort of women and gender-nonconforming individuals to thrive in their PhD programs in the mathematical sciences. Program participants attend daily lectures in subjects such as Linear Algebra, Real Analysis, Measure Theory, and Applied Mathematics. EDGE coursework is designed to prepare participants for graduate research and qualification exams, while also providing practical experience in a rigorous academic setting. Participants delve deeper into these subjects through collaborative daily problem sessions with guidance from EDGE mentors, who are current graduate students and often EDGE alumnae.
This workshop advances the study of Lefschetz Properties in commutative algebra and related fields, fostering collaboration among researchers in topology, algebraic geometry, combinatorics, and more. Goals include promoting cutting-edge research, mentoring junior mathematicians, and enhancing leadership, particularly for women and early-career researchers. The event supports academic growth for underrepresented and geographically isolated participants. Research talks reflecting the field's latest advancements and interdisciplinary collaboration aim to spark innovative ideas and breakthroughs, contributing to the progress of this dynamic area of study.
The conference will focus on recent remarkable advancements in quantum topology and its connections with geometry, representation theory, gauge theories, and physics.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, will be devoted to providing formal analysis and theoretical justification of Markov chain methods for sampling graph partitions. The goal of this workshop is to bring together experts in Schramm-Loewner evolution and related processes (including loop-erased random walks), Markov chain theory, spanning tree methods, computational geometry, and graph theory (planar/near-planar graphs and their random substructure) to address these fundamental problems.
The summer school is aimed at graduate students in low-dimensional topology. The goal is to make students familiar with the novel techniques in the field that have led to recent advances in our understanding of four-dimensional manifolds.
The aim of this workshop is to bring together participants from computational mathematics and gravitational wave astronomy to tackle computational challenges in leveraging data-driven methods in key areas of gravitational wave data analysis in order to maximize the science output of the ongoing and upcoming observations. The areas of focus will be: (i) noise classification and detection, (ii) waveform modeling and uncertainty quantification, and (iii) source parameter and astrophysical population Bayesian inference.
The conference will bring together experts in representation theory and algebraic combinatorics.
This is the 12th Conference of Positivity. Positivity is a General conference on ordered structures and their applications.
The 2025 SMS will allow graduate students to learn about a number of recent trends and advances in the field of commutative algebra. The aim of the SMS is to provide an "on-ramp" for graduate students interested in algebra, combinatorics, and/or algebraic combinatorics to learn more about commutative algebra's interaction with these fields. The introductory courses will introduce fundamental skills in commutative algebra, the more intermediate courses will expose students to cutting-edge research in the field. The school will focus on four topics within commutative algebra: Combinatorial Methods, Homological Methods, Computational Methods, and Characteristic p Methods.
Random graphs are ubiquitous in modern probability theory. Besides their intrinsic mathematical beauty, they are also used to model complex networks. In the early 2000's, I. Benjamini and O. Schramm introduced a mathematical framework in which they endowed the set of locally finite rooted connected graphs with the structure of a Polish space, called the local topology. The goal of this summer school is to introduce the framework of local limits of random graphs, the concepts of Benjamini-Schramm (or unbiased) limits and unimodularity, as well as the most important applications. The lectures will be delivered by Nicolas Curien (Prof. Paris-Saclay University) and Justin Salez (Prof. Universite Paris-Dauphine) and will be complemented by many problem sessions, where students will work in small groups under the guidance of teaching assistants, who are researchers in the field.
The Summer Schools in Probability are a highlight of Canadian probability and are internationally significant. Launched by PIMS in 2004, the school takes the form of two main 4-week courses along with three mini-courses. The schools have played a major role in the development of an exceptionally strong community of young probabilist in Canada, North America and overseas. This will be the 13th time this school has run.
Week 1: Categorification and Symplectic Duality (June 3-7, 2025). This week will feature a workshop aimed at bringing together early-career researchers and established mathematicians working in geometric representation theory and categorification. Week 2: The Langlands Program (June 9-13, 2025). This week will focus on the Langlands program, featuring several lecture series and talks that cover recent breakthroughs and ongoing research in both geometric and representation theoretic aspects of the Langlands program.
This conference has been organized around the general trend of application of geometrical ideas in mechanics, physics and biology. The emphasis is on concrete applications and modern developments in the respective fields. An overall idea is to provide a forum for an exchange of information, ideas and inspiration and further development of the international collaboration.
GLaMP 2025 is the 9th annual meeting focused on various aspects of mathematical physics. GLaMP meetings feature a three-hour mini-course, four invited lectures, contributed talks by early career researchers, and a round table discussion on career development.
The International Conference on Mathematical Sciences and Engineering (ICMSE-2025) aims to bring together researchers and professionals to share insights and advancements in mathematics, computer science, and engineering.The event will feature keynote talks, technical sessions, and networking opportunities, fostering collaboration and innovation across disciplines. It will also provide a platform to explore emerging trends and address global challenges through mathematical and scientific approaches. Theme areas of ICMSE-2025: Algebra and Analysis, Number Theory, Geometry and Topology, Mathematical Modelling, Continuum Mechanics, Probability, Statistics, Differential Equations, Optimization, Numerical Analysis, Engineering Sciences, Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning.
The Resource Modeling Association (https://resourcemodeling.org/) invites abstract submissions for the 2025 World Conference on Natural Resource Modeling, to be held on June 9-12 in Nagarkot, 25 Kilometers east to Kathmandu, Nepal. A selection of papers presented at the conference may have the opportunity to be published in the association's journal, Natural Resource Modeling, contingent upon a rigorous review process. Guest editors will extend invitations to authors whose papers explore new research areas or provide innovative perspectives on existing challenges. The abstract submission portal is currently open, and the deadline for submissions is February 28, 2025. To submit your abstract and register for the event, please visit the conference website: https://resourcemodeling.org/wcnrm2025-kathmandu-nepal/
The aim of the summer school is to introduce young researchers on the boundary between mathematics and physics to recent ideas in classical and quantum field theory using notions from complex geometry and algebraic topology. This year there is a focus on 4d gauge theories and their relationship with representation theory, algebraic geometry, and topology. The target audience of the workshop is advanced graduate students and post-docs, from both mathematics and theoretical physics. The schedule will be designed to include a large amount of time for participants to interact. We hope especially to encourage conversations between mathematicians and physicists.
The goal of this conference and school is to introduce graduate students, advanced undergraduate students, young researchers, and interested mathematicians in Vietnam, Southeast Asia, and other countries in Asia, to basics of quantum topology and its connection to many branches of mathematics, including low-dimensional topology, representations of quantum groups, combinatorics, and in particular hyperbolic geometry. It will also introduce the audience to applications of quantum topology to various areas of mathematics.
The National Science Foundation and the Conference Board of the Mathematical Sciences presents Regional Research Conferences in the Mathematical Sciences. This conference aims to train working mathematicians and graduate students alike in recent developments and new techniques that have allowed progress in the field of Operator Algebras and their classification. The conference also will feature a panel discussion about future research directions and include other activities designed to broaden participation and to provide young researchers in the field opportunities to build professional networks and share their research.
The National Science Foundation and the Conference Board of the Mathematical Sciences presents Regional Research Conferences in the Mathematical Sciences. This conference will examine the interface between the representation theory of the p-adic groups, the Langlands program, and noncommutative geometry. The 10 principal lectures will be self-contained and accessible to students and non-experts.
Conference Quasiweekend III - Twenty years on collects together experts, from all fields of mathematics, using quasiconformal methods, especially in complex dynamics, geometric function theory, geometric group theory, analysis on metric spaces. Previous conferences in this series, Quasiweekend and Quasiweekend II - Ten years after, took place in 2005 and 2015, respectively, in Helsinki. With Quasiweekend III we celebrate mathematical legacy of Juha Heinonen -- initiator of this conference series -- in the broad field of quasiconformal analysis.
The conference will consist of several research talks on topics of current interest in low dimensional topology, including four-manifolds, knot invariants, categorification, gauge theory, and connections to physics.
This summer school offers an exceptional opportunity for participants to delve into the intricate realm of statistical optimal transport theory.
Summer@ICERM is a residential undergraduate research program hosted at the Institute for Computational and Experimental Research in Mathematics at Brown University. Led by experienced faculty and graduate student teaching assistants, participating undergrads will spend seven weeks learning how to collaborate, engage in data science, and conduct research as a team. The goal of Summer@ICERM 2025: Building Useful Insights from Local Data through Sustainable partnerships (BUILDS) is to introduce students with limited experience to the field of data science through projects related to issues such as global food systems, food production, and food security.
Generating functions and their applications represent the most important field of study in mathematics and applied mathematics, science, medical sciences, probability, statistics, engineering, economics and other branches of science. The aim of this symposium is to bring together researchers from all over the world working in this field and to present their knowledge to the service of science.
Organized by a group of professors and researchers of the Department of Mathematics at the University of Aveiro, with the scientific support of CIDMA—Center for Research & Development in Mathematics and Applications, this workshop aims to celebrate the 65th anniversary of Prof. Alexander Plakhov. Aims and Scope: The workshop aims to bring together researchers in the fields of Billiard Theory, Dynamic Systems, Optimal Mass Transportation, Control, and Optimization. Topics: Billiards, Optimal mass transport, the Kakeya needle problem, Convex Geometry, Calculus of Variations, Applications of Mathematics in Mechanics, Dynamical Systems, Optimal Control, Mathematical Modelling, Mathematical Programming, Convex analysis, Convex Optimization, Integer Programming.
The Mathematical Biology Research Center (MBRC) in Nepal, a formally registered research institute and the Central Department of Mathematics, Tribhuvan University, are organizing the International Conference on Mathematical Biology (ICMB-2025) in Pokhara, Nepal, from June 12 to 14, 2025. Under the theme "Quantitative Modeling and Computation in Life Sciences and Medicine," the conference will serve as a platform for a diverse community of scientists dedicated to applying mathematics to life and health sciences. ICMB-2025 aims to showcase the event's multidisciplinary nature by uniting scholars from various fields, with a primary focus on the application of mathematical principles to biological research. The conference seeks to gather research scholars from a range of disciplines across Southeast Asia and the globe.
The BIOMATH series of conferences is devoted to recent research in life sciences based on applications of mathematics as well as mathematics applied to, or motivated by, biological studies. It is a multidisciplinary meeting forum for researchers who develop and apply mathematical and computational tools to the study of phenomena in the broad fields of biology, ecology, medicine, biotechnology, bioengineering, environmental science, etc.
Welcome to the Unhacked International Cyber Security Conference 2025. Join us from June 16-18, 2025 in Prague, Czech Republic for an unparalleled gathering of cybersecurity leaders, innovators, and experts from across the globe. This years conference is set to be the ultimate platform to address the challenges and opportunities shaping the future of cybersecurity.
The purpose of this conference, held every three years, is to bring together mathematicians who are already working in the area of analysis and probability on fractals with students and researchers from related areas. Information will be posted here as it becomes available. Financial support will be provided to a limited number of participants to cover the cost of housing in Cornell single dormitory rooms and partially support other travel expenses. Students and junior researchers from underrepresented groups in STEM are particularly encouraged to apply for travel funding. Well-established researchers are encouraged to use their own travel funding; the NSF expects that most funds will be expended on otherwise unfunded mathematicians.
ACOTCA is a series of annual conferences, established in 2003, that bring together experts at the intersection of complex analysis and operator theory. The meeting will consist of four advanced courses, six invited plenary lectures and a number of contributed talks.
This is the 47th symposium in a series that dates back to 1978, interrupted only during the Covid years. As always, there will be a large number of contributed 20 minute talks as well as several hour long plenary lectures. Significant time is set aside to promote collaboration and we particularly encourage new PhDs and young mathematicians to attend. This years Plenary Speakers are: 1. Per Enflo, Emeritus University Professor of Mathematics, Kent State University and Universidad Complutense de Madrid 2. Luis Bernal Gonzalez, Professor of the Department of Mathematical Analysis, University of Seville 3. Kornelia Hera, Hausdorff Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Bonn 4. Krystal Taylor, Associate Professor of Mathematics, The Ohio State University.
The aim of the program is to introduce algebraic coding theory and cryptography, which are two main branch of information security. Moreover, each topic will be illustrated with calculations made with a computer program. It is planned to use the free online version of the Magma Algebra program. It is planned to introduce four courses as Groups, Rings, Finite fields, finite extension, Basics of Coding theory, Basics of Cryptography and programming applications of that provide the necessary background at the undergraduate/master's level and introduce relevant research directions in the relevant fields. The participants can continue developing their knowledge into theoretic as well as application aspects, which are very useful for the community.
This is a summer school on optimal transport, heat flow and synthetic Ricci bounds in honor of 2024 Nemmers Prize winner Luigi Ambrosio. The schedule will include three mini-courses and three one-hour research talks given by experts in the field. The school is aimed at mathematics graduate students, postdocs and junior faculty.
Welcome to NIMS2025, proudly hosted by Momentera! We're thrilled to invite you to the Conference on New Innovations in Material Science, taking place from June 16-18, 2025, in the beautiful city of Prague, Czech Republic. Theme of the conference: "Future directions and challenges in material science"
22nd International Conference on Breast Pathology and Cancer Diagnosis is schedule during June 19-20, 2025, with aims to gather Breast Pathology researchers across the globe.
Perspectives on Ergodic Theory and its Interactions will be a conference on topics at the intersection of ergodic theory, combinatorics, and number theory. It will also be a celebration of Dr. Vitaly Bergelson's receipt of the Stefan Banach Medal by the Polish Academy of Sciences.
Flows involving solid particulates are ubiquitous in nature and industry alike. Such flows are found in pharmaceutical production, the chemical industry, the food and agricultural industries, energy production and the environment. Many unsolved problems remain, however. In order to be able to solve problems, granular flows need to be understood so that their behaviour can be controlled and predicted.
The central theme of this conference is the representation theory of associative algebras and the wide range of powerful methods that have emerged from its development. We aim to bring together an international group of representation theorists, working with categorical, combinatorial, geometric and homological methods, with a view to exchanging ideas and perspectives.
During June 23-27, 2025, this conference takes place at the Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Lund University, in the Hormander lecture room. The aim is to bring together experts and younger mathematicians working on sub-Riemannian geometry, spectral asymptotics and noncommutative geometry and to stimulate interactions across these fields. The conference is funded by the Marcus Wallenberg Foundation, the Carl Trygger Foundation and the European Mathematical Society.
Join us for a five-day workshop hosted by UT Austin, with support from the NSF. Mornings will be dedicated to talks, and in the afternoons, participants will work in small groups on open problems related to connections between 4-manifold trisections and diffeomorphism groups. The workshop will be preceded by introductory mini-courses on Zoom, taking place on June 18 and June 20. Participants may register for either or both workshop components.
The 26th Conference of the International Linear Algebra Society is a premier event that brings together experts and enthusiasts from across the globe. Featuring ten distinguished plenary speakers from various fields of linear algebra, including the prestigious Hans Schneider Prize Lecture, the conference welcomes a wide range of topics, from theoretical advancements to practical applications. Whether you're focused on cutting-edge research or real-world implementations, ILAS2025 offers an inclusive platform for all discussions related to linear algebra.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, is a week-long summer program for incoming second or third year students in graduate programs in the USA, designed to support and train a new generation of mathematical scientists in applied and computational mathematics, with a special emphasis on increasing the number of women, particularly those from historically excluded racial groups, in both academia and industry.
In recent years, there has been an explosion of activity surrounding algebraic points on curves, from many different perspectives. These include the study of measures of irrationality, isolated and parametrized points, computational methods to determine algebraic points, and the arithmetic statistics of algebraic points. In this workshop, we aim to bring together researchers from these diverse perspectives, with the particular goal of developing bridges between them. The workshop will include overview talks on the various perspectives, research talks, an open problem session, and structured time for collaboration.
This school will introduce students to a range of powerful combinatorial tools (webs, plabic graphs, six-vertiex model) used to understand algebraic objects ranging from the homogeneous coordinate ring of the Grassmannian to symmetric functions. While the exact applications of these tools differ, all provide graphical models for algebraic problems closely related to Grassmannian and its generalizations. Webs, plabic graphs, and the six-vertex model are ideal topics for a summer school: they require relatively little background, so will be accessible to a wide range of students; they are also active topics of current research, so after the summer school students will be well prepared to enter the research stream. Students will leave the school with a solid grasp of the combinatorics of webs, plabic graphs, and the six-vertex model, an understanding of their algebraic applications, and a taste of current research directions.
This summer school will offer a hands-on introduction to discriminants, with a view towards modern applications. Starting from the basics of computational algebraic geometry and toric geometry, the school will gently introduce participants to the foundations of discriminants. A particular emphasis will be put on computing discriminants of polynomial systems using computer algebra software. Then, we will dive into three applications of discriminants: algebraic statistics, geometric modeling, and particle physics. Here, discriminants contribute to the study of maximum likelihood estimation, to finding practical parametrizations of geometric objects, and to computations of scattering amplitudes. We will explain recently discovered unexpected connections between these three applications. In addition to lectures, the summer school will have daily collaborative exercise sessions which will be guided by the teaching assistants and will include software demonstrations.
The conference is organised within the tradition of the collaboration between the Romanian and Finnish mathematicians, initiated by Rolf Nevanlinna and Simion Stoilow. The meeting is organised by Simion Stoilow Institute of Mathematics of the Romanian Academy, "1 Decembrie 1918" University of Alba Iulia, and the Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science of the University of Bucharest. The program is divided into sections as follows: 1. Geometric function theory and classical complex analysis; 2. Quasiconformal mappings, metric geometry and related topics in classical analysis; 3. Potential analysis, PDEs and stochastics; 4. Complex geometry, dynamics, functional analytical methods in complex analysis; 5. Computational methods in geometric function theory, potential theory, and related fields.
The conference is annual event since 2009 and is held in the Black-Sea resort of Albena, Bulgaria. In 2025 will be its seventheenth edition. The conference will be scheduled in plenary and keynote lectures followed by special and contributed sessions. The accents of the conference will be on Mathematical Physics, Solitons and Transport Processes, Numerical Methods and Scientific Computing, Continuum Mechanics, Applied Analysis, Biomathematics, Applications of E-learning and Machine Learing in Technical and Natural Sciences, which can be complemented by some specific topics in contributed special sessions.
The 2025 Conference on Theoretical and Computational Algebra will take place at the University of Alavora, Portugal, from Sunday, 29 June, to Thursday, 3 July, with check-out on Friday, 4 July. This year, we celebrate Peter Cameron's remarkable contributions to groups, semigroups, combinatorics, statistics A— and beyond!
MatTriad 2025 will take place from June 30th to July 2nd, 2025 in the serene setting of Fruška Gora National Park by the city of Novi Sad in Serbia. This edition marks the continuation of the MatTriad series, previously hosted in notable locations such as Będlewo, Poland (2005, 2007, 2009, 2017, 2023), Tomar, Portugal (2011, 2021), Coimbra, Portugal (2015), Herceg-Novi, Montenegro (2013), and Liblice, Czech Republic (2019). MatTriad 2025 stands is dedicated to fostering collaboration among researchers intrigued by various facets of matrix analysis and its wide-ranging applications across mathematics and scientific disciplines. Our primary objective is to provide a platform for scholars and doctoral candidates to discuss the latest advancements in matrix and operator theory, spectral problems, combinatorial matrix theory and graphs, as well as the use of linear algebra tools in statistical modelling.
A Geometric Group Theory conference to celebrate the achievements of Martin Bridson.
The William Rowan Hamilton Geometry and Topology Workshop: Celebrating Martin Bridson's 60th Birthday will be held at the Hamilton Mathematics Institute (HMI), in Trinity College Dublin Ireland. The workshop will consist of a five day lecture series June 30-July 4th, 2025, and a poster session for junior researchers.
The goal of this event is to bring together researchers working at the interface of vertex algebras, their deformations, and integrable systems.
Center of Mathematical Sciences and Applications at Harvard University: https://www.cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/mpqft25/. Max Planck Institute for Mathematics: https://www.mpim-bonn.mpg.de/qft25. This event is a twinned workshop at the CMSA (Harvard) and the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics (Bonn). Lectures will alternate between the two sites, watched simultaneously on both sides, and there will be opportunities for dialogue between the locations. The first week will contain four pedagogical lecture series; lecturers and locations are • Michael Hopkins, Harvard (CMSA) • Alexei Kitaev, Caltech (CMSA) • Pieter Naaijkens, Cardiff (MPIM) • Bruno Nachtergaele, UC Davis (MPIM) The second week will consist of research talks. Quantum Field Theory (QFT) and Quantum Statistical Mechanics are central to high energy physics and condensed matter physics; they also raise deep questions in mathematics. The application of operator algebras to these areas of physics is well-known. Recent developments indicate that to understand some aspects QFT properly a further ingredient is needed: homotopy theory and infinity-categories. One such development is the recognition that symmetry in a QFT is better described by a homotopy type rather than a group (so-called generalized symmetries). Another one is the work of Lurie and others on extended Topological Field Theory (TFT) and the Baez-Dolan cobordism hypothesis. Finally, there is a conjecture of Kitaev that invertible phases of matter are classified by homotopy groups of an Omega-spectrum. This workshop will bring together researchers and students approaching this physics using different mathematical techniques: operator algebras, homotopy theory, higher category theory, etc. The goal is to catalyze new interactions between different communities. At the workshop recent developments will be reviewed and hopefully progress can be made on two outstanding problems: the Kitaev conjecture as well as the long-standing goal of finding a proper mathematical formulation for QFT.
This two week school on Noncommutative Algebraic Geometry will be held at the University of Antwerp in Belgium. The school will consist of two courses: Homological Mirror Symmetry and Algebraic Models for Spaces. These courses will be planned and taught by organizers with the help of teaching assistants for the problem sessions. The school will be aimed at a wide range of graduate students, from students with a Bachelor degree to beginning PhD students. The lectures and problem sessions will be complemented by a poster session in week one and a total of four introductory research talks on Friday afternoons.
3rd International Conference: Constructive Mathematical Analysis is an activity of the journal Constructive Mathematical Analysis. The first two series of the event were organized as workshops. Based on the requests from international researchers studying on constructive mathematical analysis, this series will be organized as a conference. The main goal of this conference is to promote, encourage, and provide a forum for the academic exchange of ideas and recent research works on any field of Analysis and Function Theory. The conference will present new results and future challenges, in a series of keynote lectures and contributed short talks.
Applied Linear Algebra (ALA) 2025 - in honor of Zhong-Zhi Bai will be held on July 3 - 5, 2025, in the serene beauty of the Fruška Gora National Park, near Novi Sad, Serbia. It will celebrate Zhong-Zhi Bai's outstanding contribution to the field of linear algebra, sharing insights, discovering new approaches, exploring the multi-layered landscape of applied and numerical linear algebra, among others, the current challenges of using data-driven methodologies and machine learning (ML) techniques for numerical computations and simulations.
This event is sponsored by the SIAM activity group on Applied Algebraic Geometry.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM, the NSF, and the Merkin Center at Caltech, will be devoted to the theory of metric embeddings and its interactions with geometry, analysis, probability, combinatorics, group theory, topology, and theoretical computer science. It will provide the opportunity for researchers to learn about major recent advances in this area. Another goal of the conference is to revive Matoušek's influential list of "Open Problems on Embeddings of Finite Metric Spaces" (https://kam.mff.cuni.cz/~matousek/metrop.ps), by updating it to reflect progress on existing problems, and adding to it a list of new questions and challenges.
This will be a one-week conference broadly focused on the topics of the LMFDB (lmfdb.org), mathematical databases, computation, and number theory. The conference will include invited talks, presentations by authors of papers submitted to the conference and selected by the scientific committee following peer-review, as well as time for research and collaboration. We plan to publish a proceedings volume that will include all of the accepted papers.
The summer school aims to expose participants to formal methods that can facilitate principled scientific discovery. The school will cover some of the basic automated statistical inference (in the form of machine learning techniques) and reasoning methods that are commonly used in scientific discovery, as well as novel techniques developed to tackle open questions and issues. This summer school will address novel computational methods for scientific discovery and focus on fusing axiomatic knowledge and experimental data to enable principled derivations of models of natural phenomena along with certificates of the consistency of these models with background knowledge specified as axioms.
One of the core elements of applied mathematics is mathematical modeling, consisting of nonlinear equations, such as maps, and ordinary differential equations, and partial differential equations. Such models are widely used to describe complex phenomena in biology, physics, chemistry, meteorology, epidemiology, medicine, and many other fields. A fundamental difficulty arising in studying nonlinear models is that most cannot be solved in closed form.
MIMAR is the premier maintenance and reliability modelling conference. It is an excellent international forum for disseminating information on the state-of-the-art research, theories and practices in maintenance and reliability modelling and offers a platform for connecting researchers and practitioners from around the world.
The third Vienna Congress on Mathematical Finance will be held once again at the campus of WU Vienna. The conference will bring together leading experts from various fields of Mathematical Finance such as Financial Economics, Green and Sustainable Finance, Insurance, Statistics for Financial Markets and Large Language Models, Mean Field Games and Stochastic Control, New Technologies in Finance and Insurance, Optimal Transport, Portfolio Optimisation, Risk Management, Rough Analysis in Finance and Insurance. The program will feature plenary lectures, parallel sessions with invited and contributed talks as well as poster sessions. Moreover, there will be an attractive social program. The VCMF 2025 follows the successful previous editions VCMF 2019 and VCMF 2016.
The annual meeting of the Society for Mathematical Biology showcases research in the broad area of mathematical and quantitative biology through a combination of invited plenary lectures, scientific symposia on a range of topics, and a variety of other events related to education, mentoring, diversity initiatives, and networking.
More information will be available in the coming months. In the meantime, please let us know if you plan to attend. Thank you. Smale95 Organizing Committee Indika Rajapakse Mike Shub Lenore Blum Michael Xuan
A conference celebrating Ole Warnaar's Mathematics.
The 44th Conference on Stochastic Processes and their Applications will take place from 14-18 July 2025 in Wrocław.
Conference on algebraic, number theoretic and topological aspects of rings, algebras and polynomials, including integer-valued polynomials, polynomial functions, multiplicative ideal theory, topological methods in ring theory, Zariski-Riemann spaces of valuation domains, factorization theory in rings (and monoids), module theory and linear algebra over commutative rings, Dedekind, Pr\"ufer, and Krull domains and their generalizations, and algebraic K-theory of commutative rings.
Lie groups are central objects in modern mathematics; they arise as the automorphism groups of many homogeneous spaces, such as flag manifolds and Riemannian symmetric spaces. Often, one can construct manifolds locally modelled on these homogeneous spaces by taking quotients of their subsets by discrete subgroups of their automorphism groups. Studying such discrete subgroups of Lie groups is an active and growing area of mathematical research.
This conference is sponsored by the SIAM Activity Group on Financial Mathematics.
A well established conference on Optimal Control (ODF, PDE), Dynamic Games/Mean Field Games, Continuous Optimization; Shape Optimization, Mathematical Economics, and Industrial Applications. The organisation committee is lead by Aris Daniilidis. Registration opens January 2025.
All studies related to pure and applied Mathematics and Computers Sciences are in the scope of the conference topics.
We are delighted to announce that the International Society for Analysis, its Applications and Computation (ISAAC) board, along with the School of Science and Humanities at Nazarbayev University and the Local Organizing Committee cordially invite you to the 15th International ISAAC Congress. This pivotal event is scheduled to take place at Nazarbayev University from 21 July to 25 July, 2025.
The main goal of this conference is to bring together the large community working andor interested in nonlinear PDEs, including elliptic, parabolic, dispersive and coagulation-fragmentation equations.
Class Field Theory in its cohomological form is one of the highlights of early 20th century mathematics, and is now understood as the abelian case of the Langlands Philosophy. Although it sounds like science fiction to many mathematicians, some computer scientists are arguing that AI methods are progressing so fast that soon computers will be helping humans to push back the boundaries of research in the Langlands Philosophy. However, there is currently no concrete evidence that this is happening. Furthermore, using a language model alone to do mathematics at this level is problematic, because language models are error-prone, and one error in a mathematical argument invalidates it. This summer school does not have anything to do with AI, but it has a lot to do with class field theory. During the school, we will be teaching class field theory to the Lean theorem prover. You can imagine the school as a group of people collaborating on writing a Bourbaki-like document explaining class field theory. Or you can imagine it as a group of people turning class field theory into a bunch of levels of a puzzle game and then solving these levels. Or you can imagine it as a group of people creating training data for a theorem prover-backed AI which can then try and learn some of these interesting mathematical ideas.
The most prominent and well-known effect of stiffness is its impact on numerical stability. Lesser-known but often equally important is the effect of order reduction, in which the convergence of the numerical solution is dramatically slowed compared to what classical numerical analysis would predict. Both of these issues can be dealt with through the use of implicit time discretizations. However, for large-scale applications (such as those coming from multi-dimensional PDE applications), such discretizations can entail an even higher cost as they require the solution of large systems of algebraic equations. Ongoing development in the field of time discretization now focuses on methods that are increasingly specialized and, in some cases, increasingly complex. The aim of this workshop is to advance the field of time evolution for PDEs by bringing together a broad community that will address this important issue in a variety of ways.
This school will serve as an introduction to the SLMath semester "Topological and Geometric Structures in Low-Dimensions". The school consists of two mini-courses: one on Teichm\"uller Theory and Hyperbolic 3-Manifolds and the other on Anosov Flows on Geometric 3-Manifolds. Both topics lie at the interface of low-dimensional geometric topology (specifically, surfaces, foliations, and 3-manifolds) and low-dimensional dynamics. The first course will be targeted towards students who have completed the standard first year graduate courses in geometry, topology, and analysis while the second course will geared towards more advanced students who are closer to beginning research. However, we expect that all students will benefit from both courses.
This conference series fosters the establishment of cultural exchanges and international collaborations between mathematicians in the US, Canada, and Mexico. The areas of focus of the conference are some of the most rapidly expanding areas of mathematics, and lie at the heart of many of the most important directions in modern mathematics and theoretical physics.
This is the conference of the SIAM Activity Group on Control and Systems Theory.
This is the conference of the SIAM Activity Group on Geometric Design.
The conference will reflect current developments in motivic homotopy theory and its applications in arithmetic geometry and geometric representation theory. It aims to bring together experts from these fields to facilitate the exchange of ideas in a collaborative and engaging environment.
This is the conference of the SIAM Activity Group on Applied & Computational Discrete Algorithms.
This year's theme is ”A Distinctive Outlook in Public Health & Epidemiology” Location: ANA Crowne Plaza Hotel Narita, Tokyo, Japan Connect with a diverse group of keynote speakers, renowned experts, and trailblazing researchers from around the world. This conference serves as a premier venue for sharing innovative ideas, unveiling ground breaking research, and cultivating collaborative ventures that will influence the future of Public Health and Epidemiology. Engage with leading academics, distinguished professors, and dedicated delegates in an inspiring environment dedicated to advancing the field. Whether you’re here to present your latest findings or to gain insights from pioneers in Public Health, it's an opportunity to contribute to and learn from the global discourse on health.
FDIS 2025 is the 8th edition in a series of international conferences on Finite Dimensional Integrable Systems in Geometry and Mathematical Physics. These conferences are taking place since 2011 every other year, each time at a new location: Jena (Germany, 2011), Luminy (France, 2013), Bedlewo (Poland, 2015), Barcelona (Spain, 2017), Shanghai (China 2019), Tel Aviv (Israel, 2022), Antwerp (Belgium, 2023). The conference brings together experts from related fields, such as Riemannian geometry, dynamical systems, algebraic geometry, symplectic geometry, PDEs and mathematical physics, exchanging ideas and sharing methods of study of different problems in integrable systems, applying these ideas and methods in their respective research projects. Synergy effect is expected, and indeed, was demonstrated in earlier editions of the conference.
During this one week summer school, Eleonora di Nezza (Paris, Sorbonne) and Siarhei Finski (Paris, CNRS) will give introductory talks on Kahler geometry to a group of non-experts, primarily composed of students and postdocs. Registration to open soon. The event is part of a special semester on complex geometry at the Renyi Insitute.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, is aimed at developing connections between dynamics of large topological groups on the one hand and combinatorics of their countable discrete subgroups on the other. Particular focus will be on amenability and amenability-like properties (for instance, extreme amenability, Liouville property, skew-amenability, extensive amenability, etc.). One of the main objectives of the workshop is to put substantial effort into attacking several problems in group theory by connecting researchers in several fields.
The workshop aims to bring together researchers working in combinatorics, geometry, and related fields to discuss recent developments and foster collaboration.
The subject of nonlinear analysis is of interest in its own right, and it also serves to lay the foundations for different fields of pure and applied mathematics. Researchers across the world are actively involved in analysing and developing different theories of mathematics which are applicable to real-world problems. Through this conference, the recent progress and advances in the different fields of mathematical analysis will be shared. We try to bring fruitful research directions and collaborations in this field. - To exchange and disseminate the recent developments and advances in the area of Mathematical Analysis and Applications. - To encourage the young researchers to study and pursue the research in recent topics of Mathematical Analysis. - To share the recent progress and advances in the area of Mathematical Analysis, Applications, and related fields. - To bring fruitful directions and collaborations in this field. - To provide a platform for researchers to present their findings and to give them an opportunity to interact with the experts working in the field.
Join MoMath for the seventh biennial MOVES (Mathematics of Various Entertaining Subjects) conference, "The Shapes of Math," featuring an array of talks, workshops, and interactive sessions from leading mathematicians, artists, and educators. Keynote presenters include Alex Berke, Erik Demaine, Thomas Hales, and Uyen Nguyen. MOVES will be held August 10-12, 2025, at NYU Courant in New York City. Submit an abstract or propose an activity by May 1; learn more and register at momath.org/moves.
Registration is now open for the the NSF-Simons National Institute for Theory and Mathematics in Biology (NITMB) MathBio Convergence Conference. Abstract submission deadline is April 15, 2025. The meeting will be an international forum for the presentation and discussion of research at the frontier between biology and mathematics.
The Sociedad Peruana de Matematica Aplicada y Computacional (SPMAC) and the Universidad Nacional del Altiplano de Puno (UNA) welcome all participants to the XII Congreso Internacional de Matematica Aplicada y Computacional (XII-CIMAC) that will take place during the days 11 to 15 August 2025 in Puno-Peru. The congress will be held in person, with some sessions conducted virtually.
During this one week summer school, Hans-Joachim Hein (Munster) and Daniele Angella (Firenze) will give series of talks on recent advances on Singular Kahler metrics, and Hermitian geometry respectively. We expect that the audience will consist of advanced graduate students, postdocs and junior faculty working in complex geometry. Both speakers will deliver 4 lectures of 50 minutes, with each lecture accompanied by a problem session. Registration to open soon. This event is part of a special semester on complex geometry at the Renyi Insitute
Illustration reveals the hidden structures of mathematics, broadening access to its inherent beauty and pushing the boundaries of research. Here two disciplines are interwoven: on the one hand, the art and craft of presenting ideas and on the other hand, the creativity and scholarship of creating mathematics. This program facilitates research and collaboration on these topics, both between and within these groups, and to promote professional support and recognition both for illustration and for building the infrastructure needed for its creation.
The Рeoples' Friendship University of Russia named after Patrice Lumumba, with the cooperation of the Steklov Mathematical Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences and the Lomonosov Moscow State University, is organizing the 10th International Conference on Differential and Functional Differential Equations. The Conference is dedicated to the memory of academician S.P. Novikov (20.03.1938−06.06.2024). The scientific program will consist of invited 45-minute lectures, 30-minute lectures, and 20-minute communications. The conference will be devoted to classical topics of the theory of differential equations and different kinds of nonlocal interactions: ordinary differential equations, dynamical systems, partial differential equations, mathematical physics, semigroups of operators, nonlocal spatio-temporal systems, functional differential equations, applications.
This week-long conference is in celebration of the 10-year anniversary of AATRN, the Applied Algebraic Topology Research Network. It will be the first time that AATRN meets in person, bringing together researchers from different backgrounds—mathematics, statistics, computer science, physics, biology, etc. In other words, AATRN will be "geometrically realized" at the Institute for Mathematical and Statistical Innovation in Chicago, USA! AATRN is a research community that hosts regular online talks and interviews, produces educational content, helps facilitate online conferences, and brings together an international group of researchers. AATRN's YouTube channel has 6,500 subscribers, 550 videos, and about 22 hours watched per day. We are a diverse community striving to highlight the work of both established and young researchers, in academia or in industry, internationally, and always with a spirit of inclusivity.
WARTHOG is a summer graduate school which is focused on a single topic. The goal is to get deep and reach a new and exciting result, while meeting a lot of broadly applicable math along the way... but starting from the basics. We get there with a strong emphasis on exercises. The workshop is aimed at graduate students at all levels and in all fields who have an interest in algebra (and have completed their graduate algebra sequence). Postdocs are welcome to apply as well. See the long description here or the website for mathematical details on WARTHOG 2025 in particular.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, will be devoted to studying a nascent bridge between commutative algebra and symplectic geometry, with an emphasis on developing Macaulay2 software for homological computations at the interface of these two fields. Recent breakthrough work of Hanlon-Hicks-Lazarev and Favero-Huang employs symplectic techniques to build line bundle resolutions over toric varieties, resolving several conjectures in toric geometry and multigraded commutative algebra. These results have illuminated a striking new connection between commutative algebra and symplectic geometry: this workshop will bring together experts in these fields with the goal of increasing our computational power to study the interplay between them.
Linear Algebra over finite fields is a building block for several applications including data storage, error detection and correction, and public-key cryptography. These applications enable the security and possibility of our daily digital lives. This workshop aims to expose and engage junior researchers in the foundations and applications of linear algebra over finite fields.
HDDA offers a venue for leading researchers in the area of high-dimensional statistics and data analysis to Highlight and expand the breadth of existing methods in high-dimensional data analysis and their potential for the advance of both mathematical and statistical sciences. Identify important challenges and directions for future research in the theory of regularization methods and variational inference, in algorithmic development, and in methodology for different application areas, facilitate collaboration between theoretical and subject-area researchers (mathematical statistics, STEM, econometrics, finance, social science, biostatistics). Provide opportunities for highly qualified personnel to meet and interact with leading researchers in the area.
The Connections workshop will bring together leading experts working at the intersection of kinetic theory and stochastic partial differential equations (SPDEs). Kinetic theory is a body of theory for non-equilibrium statistical mechanics. The phase-space formulation provides the flexibility of characterizing dynamics emerging from a wide range of applications, ranging from rarified gas, to plasma, to photons, to bacteria. Complementing this, SPDEs provide powerful tools for modeling systems influenced by random fluctuations and noise, essential for capturing the inherent uncertainties in complex processes. This workshop will delve into how these cutting-edge mathematical techniques can be integrated to analyze and predict the behavior of systems ranging from fluid dynamics to financial models.
The 2025 Fall Western Sectional Meeting runs for two days, with invited addresses and as many special sessions as time and space allows. The sectional meeting also includes social events and opportunities to shop at the on-site AMS Bookstore.
International Conference on Enumerative Combinatorics and Applications Virtual ICECA 2025 (August 25-27, 2025)
The goal of the workshop is to introduce non-experts to two active research areas: kinetic theory and stochastic partial differential equations. Kinetic theory studies the properties of interacting particle systems modeling various processes in non-equilibrium statistical mechanics. Stochastic partial differential equations describe dynamics subjected to random noises. The methods from the two areas complement each other in studies of the phenomena arising in physics, economics, life sciences, etc.
We are pleased to announce that The First International Conference on Mathematics and Applied Data Science (ICMADS'25) will be held between August 29-31, 2025 in a hybrid format where both physical and remote participation will be allowed. The aim of this conference is to bring together leading researchers, leading experts and academics in the field of Mathematics and Data Science in order to explore and exchange ideas at the intersection of mathematics and data science, fostering innovation and collaboration.
The Silver Jubilee International Pure Mathematics Conference 2025 (25th IPMC 2025) will be held in Islamabad from 29 to 31 August 2025. This landmark event provides a stimulating opportunity to interact with experts from various countries in a variety of branches of pure mathematics. The International Pure Mathematics Conference (IPMC) series, held annually in Islamabad since 2000, is a prestigious event dedicated to advancing research in pure mathematics. Over the years, 472 foreign speakers have presented their work across various mathematical disciplines, contributing to global collaboration. Additionally, more than 850 Pakistani speakers have delivered talks on diverse topics, fostering local academic growth. With an impressive attendance of over 4000 participants, IPMC has become a significant platform for knowledge exchange, inspiring new research and collaborations in pure mathematics. This conference continues to bring together leading mathematicians from around the world to share their research and ideas. Emeritus Professor Qaiser Mushtaq from the Department of Mathematics, Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad, and the Organizing Committee of IPMC have been organizing the International Pure Mathematics Conferences (IPMC) annually in Islamabad since the year 2000. This year, marking its Silver Jubilee, the 25th IPMC 2025 is being organized in hybrid mode, with the first day physical and the other two days online. As always, the programme of talks for the three days will be available on the IPMC website. The organizers of the Silver Jubilee IPMC 2025 are: Department of Mathematics, Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad (QAU www.qau.edu.pk), Advanced Institute of Mathematical Sciences (AIMS www.aimsciences.org.pk), Pakistan Mathematical Society (PakMS www.pakms.org.pk). Last date for regisration is 15th July 2025. Contact: pmcsecretary@hotmail.com Telephone: +923005363384
The Twelfth International Conference on New Trends of the Applications of Differential Equations in Sciences (NTADES 2025) will held in St. Constantine and Helena, Bulgaria from 1st to 4th September 2025. The Conference is in cooperation with the Society of Industrial and Applied Mathematics. This conference is devoted to many applications of differential equations in different fields of science.
The aim of this workshop is to explore recent advances in Kahler geometry, focusing on non-Archimedean aspects of the Strominger--Yau--Zaslow conjecture, potential-theoretic approaches to singular Kahler-Einstein metrics, geometric estimates for solutions to Complex Monge-Ampere equations, connections with the minimal model program, and Calabi-Yau metrics on non-compact manifolds. Registration to open soon. This event is part of a special semester on Complex Geometry at the Renyi Institute
The purpose of the conference is to bring together mathematicians from various fields to present their original research results and provide opportunities to establish new connections within the fields of pure and applied mathematics, as well as science, engineering, and technology. The conference also provides valuable networking opportunities for you to meet great personnel in these fields.
Institute of Mathematics and Mechanics of the Ministry of Science and Education of the Azerbaijan Republic is holding the XII International Scientific Conference "Modern Problems of Mathematics and Mechanics" which will be held September 3-06, 2025 in Baku.
The conference aims to unite scientists from all mathematical fields and disciplines that utilize mathematics to discuss emerging trends and applications, fostering new research opportunities in both pure and applied mathematics, as well as other sciences reliant on mathematics.
The past decade has been one of the most exciting and fruitful times in the history of combinatorics and representation theory. One of the overarching themes in this story is the search for richer structures which secretly underpin the classical problems in the field — these might manifest themselves as algebraic or geometric structures, or even as diagrammatic categories. This semester program is driven by the need to interweave machine learning, graphical computer software, and computability perspectives and techniques into the study of these diagrammatic, algebraic, and geometric structures.
The main aim of this conference is to contribute to the development of mathematical sciences, mathematical education, and their applications and to bring together the members of the mathematics community, interdisciplinary researchers, educators, mathematicians, and statisticians from all over the world. The conference will present new results and future challenges in a series of invited and short talks and poster presentations.
The International Conference "Advancing the Frontiers — International Conference on Algebra, Analysis, and Applications" will take place on September 8-10, 2025, at Kutaisi International University (KIU). This conference is a satellite event of the "XV International Conference of the Georgian Mathematical Union", which will be held on September 1-6, 2025, in Batumi, Georgia.
The goal of this workshop is to bring together both senior and junior specialists in the fields of almost complex and non-Kahler geometry to present their latest achievements in research. Key topics will include cohomological properties of complex and symplectic manifolds, analytical techniques in non-Kahler geometry, special structures on complex manifolds, deformations of complex objects, topological aspects of complex and symplectic manifolds, and Hodge theory on almost Hermitian manifolds. Registration to open soon. This is event is part of a special semester on complex geometry at the Renyi Institute.
The 12th International Conference on Stochastic Analysis and its Applications (ICSAA) is part of a biannual series of meetings. The ICSAA conference series endeavors to achieve the interplaying of mathematical disciplines as: Stochastic analysis and its applications; Stochastic differential and partial differential equations; Markov processes including jump type processes and measure-valued processes; Dirichlet forms; Analysis on fractals and percolation clusters.
The 8th Mediterranean International Conference of Pure & Applied Mathematics and Related Areas (MICOPAM 2025), which is dedicated to Professor Manuel López-Pellicer on the Occasion of his 81st Anniversary, will be held at University of Osijek in Osijek, CROATIA on September 8-12, 2025.
The conference "Women in Automorphic Forms" (WIAF) highlights recent, excellent developments on automorphic forms. These forms are of great interest in several research areas in Mathematics and Mathematical Physics. With the WIAF conference we bring together young researchers with excellent senior researchers in order to foster communications of new results and to identify fascinating new directions of further research on automorphic forms. This conference is specially, but not exclusively, addressed to female mathematicians.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, will be devoted to new developments in wall-crossing for enumerative invariants of abelian categories, with a focus on identifying promising applications.
The purpose of this workshop is to bring together experts from across algebraic combinatorics, category theory, and machine learning in order to make headway on topics at the intersection of these fields.
Classical PDEs involve partial derivatives of a function of multiple variables describing physical quantities. These are crucial for understanding continuous processes across disciplines, with solutions often forming the basis for applied research and technological developments. Fractional PDEs are an extension of classical PDEs, which generalize derivatives to non-integer orders. These equations have become a valuable tool for modelling complex, real-world systems exhibiting features not adequately captured by traditional PDEs. Spectral methods are known for their exceptional accuracy and efficiency in solving a wide range of differential equations with flexibility in handling various types of boundary conditions.
This workshop provides a platform for young researchers to present their work, engage in discussions, and foster collaboration and idea-sharing in the fields of stochastic analysis and stochastic geometric analysis.
The 3rd IMA Conference on the Mathematics of Robotics aims to bring together researchers working on all areas of robotics which have a significant mathematical content. The idea is to highlight the mathematical depth and sophistication of techniques applicable to Robotics and to foster cooperation between researchers working in different areas of Robotics. This Conference has been organised in cooperation with the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM).
Welcome to NIMS2025, proudly hosted by Momentera! We're thrilled to invite you to the Conference on New Innovations in Material Science, taking place from September 29- 1 October, 2025 in Frankfurt, Germany. Theme of the conference: "Future directions and challenges in material science".
Global Summit & Expo on Nursing and Healthcare is a leading forum for nurse practitioners, oncology nurses, nurse anaesthetist, nurse midwives, clinical nurses, and nurse consultants, along with researchers, educators, administrators, policy makers and students to learn, exchange knowledge and discuss to advance their professional development and clinical performance.
The 2025 Fall Southeastern Sectional Meeting runs for three days, with invited addresses and as many special sessions as time and space allows. The sectional meeting also includes social events and opportunities to shop at the on-site AMS Bookstore.
Cancer 2025 is a platform for professionals, researchers, and advocates to collaborate and share knowledge on the latest advancements in cancer treatment and research.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, will be devoted to further developing the method of flag algebras and its applications. Flag algebras, developed by Razborov in 2007, allows one to solve problems in combinatorics via streamlined calculations that combine elements from computer engineering and optimization. It led to many recent breakthroughs on long-standing open problems of Erdős, Sós, Turán, Gromov and Zarankiewicz, to name a few. The technique is versatile and can be applied in other settings than graphs and hypergraphs including permutations, oriented graphs, point sets, embedded graphs, and phylogenetic trees.
This event is sponsored by the SIAM activity group on Geosciences.
Mathematics is at the heart of evidence-based decision support; however, any decision requires data collection, data and signal processing, communications and communication systems to reduce cognitive burden for the decision maker and improve decision making. It is also increasingly common for AI to play a role in summation and processing, meaning that evidence is even more varied in its utility and applicability. This conference will explore both the state of the art in terms of data curation, signal processing, communication and AI to support decision making as well as looking at the impact of these systems on cognitive load.
We invite you to submit an abstract and register for our conference on game theory, held completely online from 15 to 16 October 2025. This conference is a platform for scholars and researchers to contribute and discuss their findings on issues pertaining to game theory research. This event will be held completely online for FREE, allowing participants from all around the world to participate and present their research without concerns about travel expenditures or registration fees.
The 2025 Fall Central Sectional Meeting runs for two days, with three invited addresses and as many special sessions as time and space allows. The sectional meeting also includes social events and opportunities to shop at the on-site AMS Bookstore.
The BELIEF school is a biennial event organized by the Belief Functions and Applications Society (BFAS) that offers a unique opportunity for students and researchers to learn about fundamental and advanced aspects of the theory of belief functions (also referred to as Dempster-Shafer theory, or evidence theory), a formalism for reasoning with uncertainty.
This workshop will explore the latest advances in kinetic theory and stochastic particle dynamics in mean field regimes, covering both classical themes and emerging areas. Topics will include the derivation of kinetic type equations from particle and plasma systems, state-of-the-art numerical methods, studies of multiscale phenomena, and the applications of kinetic equations in physics, chemistry, computer sciences appearing in life sciences, social sciences, and machine learning. This workshop will offer an exciting opportunity to connect researchers from all stages and sub-areas and spark new ideas.
The overall aim of the workshop is to bring together experts from different disciplines related to singular stochastic systems to facilitate the exchange of ideas. The goal is to identify and motivate novel research directions on the well-posedness, dynamical behavior and numerical simulation of singular stochastic (partial) differential equations.
The field of diagrammatic categorification is still in its early stages, but it has already had a significant impact on more traditional mathematics. This workshop aims to unite both established experts and emerging scholars across various domains of diagrammatic categorification, including representation theory, combinatorics, and link homology.
The 2025 Fall Eastern Sectional Meeting runs for two days virtually, with invited addresses and as many special sessions as time allows.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, will be devoted to recent advances in computing the stable homotopy groups of spheres. The main topics for the workshop are Filtered/Synthetic spectra techniques in the Last Kervaire Invariant Problem Filtered/Synthetic spectra techniques in the computations of equivariant slice spectral sequence Computer computations of Adams differentials in the context of classical, motivic, and unstable homotopy groups of spheres
The conference offers a unique forum for participants to exchange knowledge and experience in exploring new research and frontiers in Gynecology around the world.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, will be devoted to studying arithmetic dynamics of multiple maps. In classical arithmetic dynamics, we consider the iteration of a single endomorphism of a variety defined over a field of arithmetic interest, typically a number field or the function field of a curve. An exciting new direction in arithmetic dynamics that holds particular promise for striking new results is what we call "dynamics of multiple maps": dynamical behavior arising from the interaction of two or more endomorphisms on the same space.
Midwifery Conference 2025, where experts from around the world will share their knowledge & experiences on advancing midwifery practice & improving women's Healthcare.
The International Conference on Modern Surgery and Anesthesia will take place on November 7-8, 2025, in Dubai, UAE, bringing together global experts to discuss innovations in surgery and anesthesia. For those who can't attend in person, join the Webinar on November 14-15, 2025 (GMT+4) for a virtual experience. Network with global experts, and gain insights into the future of healthcare. Visit our website for registration and details.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, will be devoted to non-Archimedean methods in complex geometry. The main topics are: K-stability and canonical metrics, Degenerations of Calabi-Yau manifolds and the SYZ Conjecture, and Algebro-geometric and tropical aspects of degenerations.
This workshop encompasses three major aspects of computation within Representation Theory and Algebraic Combinatorics. One concerns the development of efficient algorithms to compute important quantities in order to understand and classify them better. This is closely related to understanding what optimality we could expect and in particular the computational complexity aspects of those problems. Their computational complexity class can also be used to understand the existence of combinatorial interpretations, in particular for major structure constants lacking positive formulas like Kronecker and plethysm coefficients. On the other hand, representation theory has seen important applications within computational complexity theory, in the context of Geometric Complexity Theory and Quantum Information Theory.
Annual Conference of the American Mathematical Association of Two-Year Colleges
The workshop aims to bring together researchers working on different facets of stochastic PDEs. The field of stochastic PDEs has seen many new techniques recently appear to tackle different problems, including renormalization, large scale and long-time behaviours, stochastic fluid dynamics, and homogenization. The goal of the workshop is to facilitate discussions and allow different communities to engage with one another one.
This is the conference of the SIAM Activity Group on Analysis of Partial Differential Equations.
Neuroscience Conference 2025 welcomes researchers, scholars, students and other delegates across the globe to gather and network with their peers at Neuroscience 2025 in the month of November 2025, dated 26-27 in Paris, France.
Infinite-dimensional division algebras are essential in noncommutative algebra and noncommutative algebraic geometry, yet they have remained cryptic and largely unclassified. This workshop will address three key classical open problems concerning them: the Kurosh Problem, the Free Subalgebra Problem and Artin's Conjecture. We will review decades of progress on these wide-open problems and emphasize novel techniques and emerging theories and concepts that show promise in facilitating breakthroughs.
The National Science Foundation and the Conference Board of the Mathematical Sciences presents Regional Research Conferences in the Mathematical Sciences. This conference will expose early career researchers to cutting-edge research at the interface of applied mathematics and machine learning and also help identify new research directions and will foster the building of new collaborations between research groups in the Texas-Louisiana area and other regions. The principal lectures will be supplemented by a dozen contributed talks from participants, a poster session, a mentoring academic panel, and a panel that featuring researchers from industry.
This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, will bring together researchers from across the mathematical sciences to apply a broad range of mathematical, statistical, and data science tools to study the mathematical sciences community, with a specific focus on promoting equity. The workshop will include both researchers currently working in this area, as well as researchers new to the field interested in applying their expertise to this area.
Recently, there have been major developments in the theory of webs and web bases from multiple perspectives, such as recent work of Bodish--Elias--Rose--Tatham in type C motivated by applications to link homology. We believe that webs may serve as a nexus for disparate communities of mathematicians to meet. This includes not only fostering connections between researchers in algebraic combinatorics, Schubert calculus, and representation theory, but also building bridges with researchers in algebraic geometry via mirror symmetry and cluster geometry as well as researchers in topology and knot theory via the diagrammatic method. The goal of this workshop is thus to bring together experts from these communities and cross-fertilize these diverse subjects by spreading knowledge of recent developments and perspectives on our shared interest in webs.
The ATCM 2025 is an international conference that started in Singapore in 1995. We promise ATCM 2025 will continue to be instructive and enjoyable as always and will continue addressing technology-based issues in all Mathematical Sciences. Thanks to advanced technological tools such as computer algebra systems (CAS), interactive and dynamic geometry, and portable devices, the effectiveness of our teaching and learning, and the horizon of our research in mathematics and its applications continue to grow rapidly. This conference aims to provide a forum for educators, researchers, teachers, and experts to exchange information regarding enhancing technology to enrich mathematics learning, teaching, and research at all levels. English is the official language of the conference. ATCM averagely attracts participants representing over 25 countries around the world.
Discover the forefront of research and innovation in the field of industrial and applied mathematics ! The International Conference of Industrial and Applied Mathematics is a premier gathering of scholars, researchers, and professionals from around the world, dedicated to advancing knowledge and fostering collaboration in this rapidly evolving discipline.
Other websites for mathematical meetings: