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Summer Graduate Workshop


Every summer MSRI organizes several summer graduate schools (usually two weeks each), most of which are held at MSRI. Attending one of these schools can be a very motivating and exciting experience for a student; participants have often said that it was the first experience where they felt like real mathematicians, interacting with other students and mathematicians in their field.


Eligibility: Graduate students from MSRI Academic Sponsoring Institutions or from Department of Mathematics at U.S. Universities are eligible for nomination. For full-level academic sponsors, MSRI provides support for two students per summer and a third one if at least one of them is female or from a group that is underrepresented in the mathematical sciences. For mid-level academic sponsors, MSRI provides support for one student per summer and a second if at least one of them is female or from a group that is underrepresented in the mathematical sciences. For entry-level academic sponsors and other U.S. institutions, MSRI provides support for one student per summer. All institutions can nominate additional students to attend a summer school if they pay the attendance fee of $1,500 per student per school. Those additional students will only be considered after the end of the open enrollment period and if the summer school has not reached capacity by that time.


How to apply: Graduate students must be nominated by their Director of Graduate Studies. The Director of Graduate Studies submits the nominations for his institution to the workshop coordinator (sgs2013@msri.org) during the enrollment period, specifying his name and institution and, for each nominee, the summer school name, the student\'s name, the student\'s contact (email), and gender and ethnicity.


Selection process: MSRI accepts nominees on a first-come first-served basis up to the limits of the capacity of each summer school. If the chosen school is already full, the students are either kept on a waiting list or the nominating institution may make nominations to other schools until its quota is reached.


Support: MSRI covers travel and local expenses of the students. The maximal allowance for travel reimbursement is up to $550 for students from US and Canadian universities (depending on the point of origin), and $700 for students from other sponsoring institutions.


Enrollment Period: December 3, 2012 through March 1, 2013


Early nominations will not be accepted.

Current Summer Graduate Workshops
There are no current summer graduate workshops.

Upcoming Summer Graduate Workshops
June 17, 2013 to June 28, 2013

Organizers: Andrew J. Blumberg (University of Texas at Austin), Teena Gerhardt (Michigan State University), and Michael A. Hill* (University of Virginia)

Modern algebraic topology is a broad and vibrant field which has seen recent progress on classical problems as well as exciting new interactions with applied mathematics. This summer school will consist of a series of lecture by experts on major research directions, including several lectures on applied algebraic topology. Participants will also have the opportunity to have guided interaction with the seminal texts in the field, reading and speaking about the foundational papers.
June 24, 2013 to July 5, 2013

Organizers: Sergei Gukov (Caltech), Mikhail Khovanov (Columbia), Johannes Walcher (McGill)

This Summer Graduate Workshop will be held in Montreal, Canada.

Homology theories of knots and links is a burgeoning field at the interface of mathematics with theoretical physics. The 2013 edition of the SMS will bring together leading researchers in mathematics and mathematical physics working in this area, with the aim to educate a new generation of scientists in this exciting subject. The school will provide a pedagogical review of the current state of the various constructions of knot homologies, and also encourage interactions between the communities in order to facilitate development of the unified picture.
June 30, 2013 to July 20, 2013

Organizers: Hubert Bray (Duke University), Greg Galloway (University of Miami), Rafe Mazzeo (Stanford University), and Natasa Sesum (University of Pennsylvania)

This Summer Graduate Workshop will be held in Park City, Utah.

The Graduate Summer School bridges the gap between a general graduate education in mathematics and the specific preparation necessary to do research on problems of current interest. In general, these students will have completed their first year, and in some cases, may already be working on a thesis. While a majority of the participants will be graduate students, some postdoctoral scholars and researchers may also be interested in attending.

We strongly recommend that graduate students have already had the equivalent of rigorous first year graduate-level courses in topology, algebra and analysis.

The main activity of the Graduate Summer School will be a set of intensive short lectures offered by leaders in the field, designed to introduce students to exciting, current research in mathematics. These lectures will not duplicate standard courses available elsewhere. Each course will consist of lectures with problem sessions. Course assistants will be available for each lecture series. The participants of the Graduate Summer School meet three times each day for lectures, with one or two problem sessions scheduled each day as well.
July 1, 2013 to July 12, 2013

Organizers: Toby Gee (Imperial College, London), Ariane Mézard (The University Pierre and Marie Curie, Paris), David Nadler (University of California, Berkeley), and Peter Scholze (University of Bonn, Germany)

The branches of number theory most directly related to automorphic forms have seen enormous progress over the past five years. Techniques introduced since 2008 have made it possible to prove many new arithmetic applications. The purpose of the current workshop is to drow the attention of young students or researchers to new questions that have arisen in the course of bringing several chapters in the Langlands program and related algebraic number theory to a close. We will focus especially on some precise questions of a geometric nature, or whose solutions seem to require new geometric insights. A graduate level in Number Theory is expected.

This two-week workshop will be devoted to the following subjects: Automorphy lifting theorems, p-adic local Langlands program, Characters of categorical representations and Hasse-Weil zeta function. During the first week, the lecturers present an open question and related mathematical objects. The first exercice sessions serve to direct the participants to an appropriate subject depending on their level. During the second week, the lecturers give some more advanced lectures on the field.
July 29, 2013 to August 9, 2013

Organizers: Scientific Committee: Justin Corvino (Lafayette College), and Pengzi Miao (University of Miami)

Organizing Committee: Giorgio Patrizio (Università di Firenze, Italy)

In cooperation with INdAM (Istituto Nazionale di Alta Matematica) and the CMI (Clay Mathematical Institute), MSRI will sponsor a summer graduate workshop on Mathematical General Relativity in Cortona during the summer of 2013; the school will reprise the very successful school of Mathematical General Relativity held at MSRI in 2012.


Mathematical general relativity is the study of mathematical problems related to Einstein's theory of gravitation. There are interesting connections between the physical theory and problems in differential geometry and partial differential equations.

The purpose of the summer school is to introduce graduate students to some fundamental aspects of mathematical general relativity, with particular emphasis on the geometry of the Einstein constraint equations and the Positive Mass Theorem. These topics will comprise a component of the upcoming semester program at MSRI in Fall 2013.

There will be mini-courses, as well as several research lectures.
July 29, 2013 to August 9, 2013

Organizers: Gunther Uhlmann (University of California Irvine, University of Washington)

In this two week program we will develop some of the mathematical foundations of seismic imaging that is a basic tool used in ``Imaging the Earth Interior". This is one of the components of the Mathematics of Planet Earth year in 2013.

The goal in seismic imaging is to determine the inner structure of the Earth from the crust to the inner core by using information provided by earthquakes in the case of the deep interior or by measuring the reflection of waves produced by acoustic or elastic sources on the surface of the Earth. The mathematics of seismic imaging involves solving inverse problems for the wave equation. No previous experience on inverse problems will be assumed.

Past Summer Graduate Workshops
July 23, 2012 to August 3, 2012

Organizers: David Marker* (University of Illinois, Chicago), Thomas Scanlon (University of California, Berkeley), Carol Wood (Wesleyan University).

The workshop will consist of two minicourses, together with a selection of topical lectures.

In the model theory course, o-minimality, and specifically the concrete example of the semi-algebraic sets of real numbers will provide the setting in which we introduce various fundamental results from model theory.
The algebraic dynamics course will allow the introduction of concepts and proof techniques from number theory and algebraic geometry in the context of applications involving model theory.

Toward the end of the workshop, the two minicourses will converge on the Pila-Wilkie theorem concerning points on analytic varieties, a result crucial in recent applications of o-minimality to diophantine geometry.
July 9, 2012 to July 20, 2012

Organizers: Justin Corvino* (Lafayette College) and Pengzi Miao (University of Miami)

Mathematical general relativity is the study of mathematical problems related to Einstein's theory of gravitation. There are interesting connections between the physical theory and problems in differential geometry and partial differential equations.

The purpose of the workshop is to introduce graduate students to some fundamental aspects of mathematical general relativity, with particular emphasis on the geometry of the Einstein constraint equations and the Positive Mass Theorem. These topics will comprise a component of the upcoming semester program at MSRI in Fall 2013.

There will be mini-courses, as well as several research lectures. Students are expected to have had courses in graduate real analysis and Riemannian geometry, while a course in graduate-level partial differential equations is recommended.
July 1, 2012 to July 21, 2012

Organizers: Mladen Bestvina (University of Utah), Michah Sageev (Technion – Israel Institute of Technology), and Karen Vogtmann (Cornell University)

This Summer Graduate Workshop will be held in Park City, Utah.

Some mobility between the Research in Mathematics and Graduate Summer School programs is expected and encouraged, but interested candidates should read the guidelines carefully and apply to the one program best suited to their field of study and experience. Postdoctoral scholars who are working in the field of Geometric Group Theory should apply to the Research Program in Mathematics, not to the Graduate Summer School.
Graduate students who are beyond their basic courses and recent PhDs in all fields of mathematics are encouraged to apply to the Graduate Summer School. Funding will go primarily to graduate students. Postdoctoral scholars not working in the field of Geometric Group Theory should also apply, but should be within four years of receipt of their PhD.
Deadline for submission of applications is January 31, 2012. Supplemental materials (such as Reference Letters) must be received in the PCMI office by February 4, 2012. Please plan accordingly. (Late applications may be accepted at the discretion of the organizers.) Response may be expected in early April. Financial support is available. Applicants are invited to request financial support by checking the appropriate boxes on the application form.
June 25, 2012 to July 6, 2012

Organizers: Louigi Addario-Berry* (McGill University), Luc Devroye (McGill University), Bruce Reed (McGill University)

This Summer Graduate Workshop will be held in Montreal, Canada.

One of the cornerstones of the probabilistic approach to solving combinatorial problems is the following guiding principle: information about global structure can be obtained through local analysis. This principle is ubiquitous in probabilistic combinatorics. It arises in problems ranging from graph colouring, to Markov chain mixing times, to Szemerédi's regularity lemma and its applications, to the theory of influences. The 2012 Séminaire de Mathématiques Supérieures brings together experts in probabilistic combinatorics from around the world, to explain cutting edge research which in one way or another exhibits this principle.
June 18, 2012 to June 29, 2012

Organizers: Dan Rogalski* (University of California, San Diego), Travis Schedler (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Michael Wemyss (The University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom)

This workshop will introduce some of the major themes of the MSRI program "Interactions between Noncommutative Algebra, Representation Theory, and Algebraic Geometry" to be held in the spring of 2013. There will be four mini-courses on the topics of noncommutative projective geometry, deformation theory, noncommutative resolutions of singularities, and symplectic reflection algebras. As well as providing theoretical background, the workshop will aim to equip participants with some intuition for the many open problems in this area through worked examples and experimental computer calculations.
August 1, 2011 to August 12, 2011

Organizers: Gregg Musiker (University of Minnesota), Lauren Williams* (University of California, Berkeley)

Cluster algebras are a class of combinatorially defined rings that provide a unifying structure for phenomena in a variety of algebraic and geometric contexts. A partial list of related areas includes quiver representations, statistical physics, and Teichmuller theory. This summer workshop for graduate students will focus on the combinatorial aspects of cluster algebras, thereby providing a concrete introduction to this rapidly-growing field. Besides providing background on the fundamentals of cluster theory, the summer school will cover complementary topics such as total positivity, the polyhedral geometry of cluster complexes, cluster algebras from surfaces, and connections to statistical physics. No prior knowledge of cluster algebras will be assumed.

The workshop will consist of four mini-courses with accompanying tutorials. Students will also have opportunities for further exploration using computer packages in Java and Sage.
July 18, 2011 to July 29, 2011

Organizers: Scientific Committee: David Cox* (Amherst College) and Hal Schenck (University of Illinois)

Organizing Committee: Giorgio Patrizio (Università di Firenze, Italy) and Sandro Verra (Università di Roma Tre, Italy)

In cooperation with INdAM (Istituto Nazionale di Alta Matematica) and the SMI (Scuola Matematica Interuniversitaria), MSRI will sponsor a summer graduate workshop (SGW) on toric varieties in Cortona during summer of 2011; the workshop will reprise the very successful SGW on toric varieties held at MSRI in 2009.
Toric varieties are algebraic varieties defined by combinatorial data, and there is a wonderful interplay between algebra, combinatorics and geometry involved in their study. Many of the key concepts of abstract algebraic geometry (for example, constructing a variety by glueing affine pieces) have very concrete interpretations in the toric case, making toric varieties an ideal tool for introducing students to abstruse concepts.

Special restrictions apply, please see the workshop homepage.
July 11, 2011 to July 22, 2011

Organizers: Camillo De Lellis (Universität Zürich), Tatiana Toro* (University of Washington)

Geometric Measure Theory (GMT) is a field of Mathematics that has contributed greatly to the development of the calculus of variations and geometric analysis. In recent years it has experienced a new boom with the development of GMT in the metric space setting which has lead to unexpected applications (for examples to questions arising from theoretical computer sciences). The goal of this summer graduate workshop is to introduce students to different aspects of this field. There will be 5 mini-courses and a couple of research lectures. We expect students to have a solid background in measure theory.
July 3, 2011 to July 23, 2011

Organizers: Benson Farb (University of Chicago), Richard Hain (Duke University), and Eduard Looijenga (University of Utrecht, Netherlands)

The study of moduli spaces of Riemann surface is a rich mixture of geometric topology, algebraic topology, complex analysis and algebraic geometry. Each community of researchers that studies these moduli spaces generates its own problems and its own techniques for solving them. However, it is not uncommon for researchers in one community to solve problems generated by another once they become aware of them. The goal of this summer school is to give graduate students a broad background in the various approaches to the study of moduli spaces of Riemann surfaces so that they will be aware of the problems and techniques of many of the communities that study these fascinating objects. Graduate student participants from the various communities will be encouraged to interact with their colleagues from the other communities of students in order to maximize cross fertilization.

Special restrictions apply, please see the workshop homepage.
June 27, 2011 to July 8, 2011

Organizers: Galia Dafni* (Concordia University, Montreal), Robert McCann (University of Toronto), and Alina Stancu (Concordia University, Montreal)


In cooperation with the CRM (Centre de Recherches Mathematiques), the Fields Institute, and the PIMS (Pacific Insitute for Mathematical Sciences), MSRI will sponsor a summer graduate workshop on Metric measure spaces: geometric and analytic aspects in Montreal, Canada.
In recent decades, metric-measure spaces have emerged as a fruitful source of mathematical questions in their own right, and as indispensable tools for addressing classical problems in geometry, topology, dynamical systems and partial differential equations. The purpose of the 2011 summer school is to lead young scientists to the research frontier concerning the analysis and geometry of metric-measure spaces, by exposing them to a series of mini-courses featuring leading researchers who will present both the state-of-the-art and the exciting challenges which remain.

Special restrictions apply, please see the workshop homepage.
June 21, 2011 to July 24, 2011

Organizers: Dr. Duane Cooper (Morehouse College), Dr. Ricardo Cortez (Tulane University), Dr. Herbert Medina (Loyola Marymount University), Dr. Ivelisse Rubio (University of Puerto Rico), and Dr. Suzanne Weekes*(Worcester Polytechnic Institute)

The MSRI-UP summer program is designed for undergraduate students who have completed two years of university-level mathematics courses and would like to conduct research in the mathematical sciences. Due to funding restrictions, only U.S. citizens and permanent residents are eligible to apply and the program cannot accept foreign students regardless of funding.
June 20, 2011 to July 1, 2011

Organizers: Nicola Arcozzi (Universita\' di Bologna), Richard Rochberg (Washington University), Eric T Sawyer (McMaster University), Brett D Wick* (Georgia Institute of Technology)

This workshop will focus on the classical Dirichlet space of holomorphic functions on the unit disk. This space is at the center of several active, interrelated areas of research that, viewed more broadly, focus on the interaction between function theoretic operator theory and potential theory. There are several goals of this Summer Graduate Workshop. First, mathematically, the workshop will demonstrate the basic properties of the Dirichlet space, then introduce the technique of Trees in Function Spaces. The workshop will show the interconnections between the areas of Complex Analysis, Function Theory, and Operator Theory and will also illustrate the real-variable analogues of the analytic result discussed.
June 6, 2011 to June 17, 2011

Organizers: Daniel Erman (Stanford University), Irena Swanson* (Reed College), and Amelia Taylor (Colorado College)



This workshop will involve a combination of theory and symbolic computation in commutative algebra. The lectures are intended to introduce three active areas of research: Boij-Söderberg theory, algebraic statistics, and integral closure. The lectures will be accompanied with tutorials on the computer algebra system Macaulay 2.
August 2, 2010 to August 13, 2010

Organizers: Matthias Köppe (University of California, Davis) and Jiawang Nie (University of California, San Diego)

This workshop is intended to introduce to graduate students the main ideas of algebraic, geometric and combinatorial methods in global optimization. We emphasize the major developments in the past few years from two viewpoints. The first one is that of the interaction of semidefinite programming and real algebraic geometry and includes topics such as linear matrix inequalities, positive polynomials, and sums of squares. The second viewpoint is that of primal methods and generating function methods in integer linear and nonlinear optimization.
July 12, 2010 to July 23, 2010

Organizers: Chris Jones (University of North Carolina and University of Warwick), Doug Nychka (National Center for Atmospheric Research), and Mary Lou Zeeman (Bowdoin College)

NCAR supports scientific research on nearly every aspect of the atmosphere and related components of the Earth’s physical and biological systems. This includes developing state-of-the- art climate models, high performance computing and also innovative ways of observing the atmosphere and oceans. The Center has approximately 1000 staff and is supported primarily by the National Science Foundation. Part of the NCAR mission is to engage students in the problems of understanding climate and weather and so provides an ideal context for this summer graduate workshop. The workshop is also part a larger program at NCAR through the Institute for Mathematics Applied to Geosciences: Mathematicians and Climate.
For more information, please see NCAR summer school page
June 27, 2010 to July 17, 2010

Organizers: Tony Chan (University of California, Los Angeles), Ron Devore (Unversity of South Carolina, Columbia), Stanley Osher (University of California, Los Angeles), and Hongkai Zhao (University of California, Irvine)

Both an MSRI nomination and PCMI application are required to attend the Image Processing summer school. The application form can be found by going to the PCMI page IAS/PCMI application homepage and clicking on the sentence "You're ready to apply."




Once the PCMI application is complete IAS/PCMI application homepage please return a letter of nomination from the Director of Graduate Studies to MSRI.
June 21, 2010 to July 10, 2010

Organizers: Krzysztof Burdzy (University of Washington),
Zhenqing Chen (University of Washington),
Christopher Hoffman (University of Washington),
Soumik Pal (University of Washington),
Yuval Peres ( University of California, Berkeley)

The 2010 Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences (PIMS) Summer
School in Probability will be held at the University of Washington and
Microsoft Research. The workshop will have two main courses, and three short ones.

For further information please visit the following link pims homepage
June 21, 2010 to July 2, 2010

Organizers: William Stein (University of Washington)

This workshop will introduce graduate students to several central ideas in the arithmetic of elliptic curves. Participants will join a project group that will focus mainly on one topic, possibly involving elliptic curves over number fields, complex or p-adic L-functions, Heegner points and Kolyvagin classes, Iwasawa theory, and the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture. The workshop will emphasize the essential interplay of abstract mathematics with explicit computation, which has played a central role in number theory ever since Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer made their famous conjecture in the 1960s. Participants will use, and improve, the free open-source Python-based mathematical software system Sage (http://www.sagemath.org) for computational projects.
June 14, 2010 to June 25, 2010

Organizers: Heath Emerson, (University of Victoria)
Thierry Giordano, (University of Ottawa)
Marcelo Laca*, (University of Victoria)
Ian Putnam, (University of Victoria)

The summer school aims to expose participants to the classi cation of noncommutative
spaces, to the study of their homological and cohomological invariants, and to explore fascinating
new connections between their symmetries and long standing problems in number
theory. Additional information can be found on the PIMS page
August 3, 2009 to August 14, 2009

Organizers: John Etnyre (Georgia Institute of Technology), Dusa McDuff* (Barnard College, Columbia University) and Lisa Traynor (Bryn Mawr College).

Symplectic and Contact Topology has undergone rapid and exciting growth
in the past few decades and is currently a rich subject, employing a variety of diverse techniques and touching on many areas of mathematics, such as algebraic and differential geometry, dynamical systems and low dimensional topology. This workshop is intended both for graduate students new to the
area and for those working in the field.
Lectures in the first week will introduce participants to basic topological, geometric and analytic techniques, including J-holomorphic curves. The second week will discuss applications to symplectic geometry and to 3-dimensional topology and knot theory. A variety of discussion
sessions in the afternoon will cater to the differing interests of the students. Participants may consider staying for the Connections for Women and/or the Introductory workshop to the year long Symplectic Geometry program that starts just after this workshop.
July 20, 2009 to July 31, 2009

Organizers: Gunther Uhlmann* (University of Washington).

Inverse Problems are problems where causes for a desired or an observed effect are to be determined. They lie at the heart of scientific inquiry and technological development. Applications include a number of medical as well as other imaging techniques, location of oil and mineral deposits in the earth's substructure, creation of astrophysical images from telescope data, finding cracks and interfaces within materials, shape optimization, model identification in growth processes and, more recently, modelling in the life sciences.

The workshop will consist of several minicourses addressing several of the theoretical and practical issues arising in inverse problems including boundary rigidity and travel time tomography, cloaking and invisibility, electrical impedance imaging, statistical methods and biological applications, thermoacoustic and x-ray tomography, and resonances.
July 20, 2009 to July 24, 2009

Organizers: Jeffrey Adams (University of Maryland) , Peter Trapa* (University of Utah), Susana Salamanca (New Mexico State University), John Stembridge (University of Michigan), and David Vogan (MIT).

The structure of real reductive algebraic groups is controlled by a remarkably simple combinatorial framework, generalizing the presentation of Coxeter groups by generators and relations. This framework in turn makes much of the infinite-dimensional representation theory of such groups amenable to computation.

The Atlas of Lie Groups and Representations project is devoted to looking at representation theory from this computationally informed perspective. The group (particularly Fokko du Cloux and Marc van Leeuwen) has written computer software aimed at supporting research in the field, and at helping those who want to learn the subject.

The workshop will explore this point of view in lecture series aimed especially at graduate students and postdocs with only a modest background (such as the representation theory of compact Lie groups).

Deadline for funding applications: 1 March, 2009.


The official workshop website is at: http://www.liegroups.org/workshop/
July 6, 2009 to July 17, 2009

Organizers: Jinho Baik ( University of Michigan), Percy Deift* (New York University),Toufic Suidan (University of Arizona), Brian Rider (University of Colorado)

The goal of this workshop is two-fold: (1) to describe many of the recent advances that have been made in the application of random matrix theory to problems in mathematics and physics (2) to develop some of the mathematical tools that are needed to enter the field. Applications of random matrix theory are now being made to number theory, combinatorics, statistical physics and statistics amongst other fields. The techniques employed in the field include methods from integrable systems, combinatorics, complex analysis, orthogonal polynomials and of course random matrix theory per se.
June 28, 2009 to July 18, 2009

Organizers: Cristian Popescu (UCSD), Karl Rubin ( UC Irvine) , Alice Silverberg (UC Irvine).

For application forms and information please visit the following link IAS/PCMI application homepage
June 15, 2009 to June 26, 2009

Organizers: David Cox ( Amherst College) and Hal Schenck (University of Illinois)

Toric varieties are algebraic varieties defined by combinatorial data, and there is a wonderful interplay between algebra, combinatorics and geometry involved in their study. Many of the key concepts of abstract algebraic geometry (for example, constructing a variety by gluing affine pieces) have very concrete interpretations in the toric case, making toric varieties an ideal tool for introducing students to abstruse concepts.
July 14, 2008 to August 1, 2008

Organizers: Christopher Jones (UNC Chapel Hill and U Warwick, UK), Inez Fung (U.C. Berkeley), Eric Kostelich (Arizona State University), K.K. Tung (U. Washington), and Mary Lou Zeeman (Bowdoin College), Charles D. Camp (Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo), Rachel Kuske (Univ British Columbia)

The goal of the workshop will be to discern ways in which mathematics can contribute and to expose new researchers to some of the key areas that we believe will form the basis of serious mathematical considerations of climate change issues.
July 7, 2008 to July 18, 2008

Organizers: J.M. Landsberg (Texas A&M), Lek-Heng Lim (UC Berkeley) and Jason Morton (UC Berkeley)

Recently the common geometry of tensors arising in questions in computational complexity, statistical learning theory, signal processing, scientific data analysis have been looked at from a unified perspective. The underlying geometry and representation theory will be covered in this workshop with and eye towards problems such as the complexity of matrix multiplication, Valiant's approach to P=NP, measures of entanglement in quantum information theory, graphicalmodels in statistical learning theory, independent component analysis and other multilinear data analytic techniques.
July 6, 2008 to July 26, 2008

Organizers: Mircea Mustaţă (University of Michigan), Jeff McNeal (Ohio State University)

NOTE: This workshop requires a special application with a January 20, 2008 deadline. For application forms, please visit http://www.admin.ias.edu/ma/current/program_gradsummer.php
June 16, 2008 to June 27, 2008

Organizers: Floyd Williams (University of Massachusetts) and Klaus Kirsten (Baylor University)

In recent years,a noteworthy and very fruitful interlacing of number theory and physics has emerged.As indicated in the September 2007 issue of the AMS Notices,for example,a new journal "Communications in Number Theory and Physics " has just been launched to follow significant interactions and dynamics between these two fields.Several books are now available,in addition to an array of conference and workshop activity,that accent this fortunate merger of "pure"mathematics and physical theory-with applications that range from field theory (conformal and topological),extended objects (strings and branes)cosmology and black hole physics, to Bose-Einstein condensation and the theory of relativistic gases.
July 23, 2007 to August 3, 2007

Organizers: Max Lieblich (Princeton), Martin Olsson (Berkeley), Brian
Osserman (Berkeley), Ravi Vakil (Stanford)

This workshop is intended to introduce to graduate students the main ideas of deformation theory and moduli spaces in algebraic geometry. We hope to illuminate the general theory through extensive discussions of concrete examples and applications.
July 9, 2007 to July 20, 2007

Organizers: Henry Wolkowicz. (University of Waterloo)

This workshop is intended to introduce to graduate students the main ideas of Continuous Optimization and its Applications. In particular, we emphasize the major developments in the last ten years. This includes the use of interior point methods in the solution ...
July 8, 2007 to July 13, 2007

This workshop will expose students in the geosciences, ecology, and mathematics to multidisciplinary science through a focus on estimating the sources and sinks of carbon for the Earth system. One goal is to train the next generation of researchers to work ...
July 1, 2007 to July 21, 2007

Organizers: Scott Sheffield, Thomas Spencer

The Graduate Summer School bridges the gap between a general graduate education in mathematics and the specific preparation necessary to do research on problems of current interest. In general, these students will have completed their first year, and in some ...
June 4, 2007 to June 16, 2007

Organizers: Aaron Bertram (University of Utah), Y.P. Lee (university of Utah), Eric Sharpe (University of Utah and Virginia Tech)

Speakers:Aaron Bertram (University of Utah)Andrei Calderaru (University of Wisconsin-Madison)Patrick Clarke (University of Miami)Alastair Craw (University of Glasgow)Eric Sharpe (University of Utah and Virginia Tech)Over the last several years derived categories ...
July 31, 2006 to August 11, 2006

Organizers: William Stein (University of Washington)

This workshop will concentrate on computing with modular forms, providing students with the necessary background in both the theoretical and computational aspects of the subject.
July 17, 2006 to July 28, 2006

Organizers: Inez Fung (University of California, Berkeley)

Projections of future climate require projections of the abundance of carbon dioxide and other trace constituents in the atmosphere. This in turns requires understanding the sources and sinks of atmospheric CO2 and how they interact with the climate. Participants will work on projects using atmospheric data provided by NCAR.
June 25, 2006 to July 15, 2006

Organizers: Peter Oszvath (Columbia University) and Tom Mrowka (MIT).

This will be a minicourse for graduate students on recent techniques and advances in three and four dimensional topology.
June 19, 2006 to June 30, 2006

Organizers: Reinhard Laubenbacher (Virginia Bioinformatics Institute at Virginia Tech) and Lior Pachter (Department of Mathematics, UC Berkeley)

The novel features of biological systems pose new challenges that require new mathematics. In many cases even the fundamental mathematical language is lacking in order to treat certain biological phenomena quantitatively. Here, traditionally non-applied areas of mathematics can make an important contribution, and at the same time take advantage of unique new problems to open up mathematically interesting avenues of research.
May 21, 2006 to June 2, 2006

Organizers: Bill Casselman (University of British Columbia), Dragan Milicic (University of Utah), Peter Trapa (University of Utah)

This minicourse will be aimed at beginning graduate students, and is devoted to all aspects of the theory of SL(2,R) including: discrete and principal series, intertwining operators, unitary representations, character theory, etc.
August 6, 2005 to August 20, 2005

Organizers: Mathias Beck and Sinai Robins

The objective of the summer school is to introduce students to a vital area of mathematics which exemplifies the interaction between different mathematical subjects, as well as the interaction between theoretical and computational aspects of mathematics. The ...
July 25, 2005 to August 5, 2005

Organizers: John D’Angelo

CR Geometry is a developing branch of mathematics which arose from the theory of functions of several complex variables and which touches nearly all fields of mathematics. The name itself has two etymologies: CR stands for Cauchy-Riemann and suggests the Cauchy-Riemann ...
June 20, 2005 to June 30, 2005

Organizers: Anurag Singh and Uli Walther

Graduate Students from MSRI Sponsoring Institutions may benominated to participate in this program.
June 20, 2005 to July 15, 2005

Organizers: Gang Tian, John Lott, John Morgan, Bennett Chow, Tobias Colding, Jim Carlson, David Ellwood, Hugo Rossi

Graduate Students from MSRI Sponsoring Institutions may benominated to participate in this program.
June 19, 2005 to July 1, 2005

Organizers: David Austin, Bill Casselman and Jim Fix

This workshop will introduce sophisticated techniques of computer graphics for use to explain mathematics in research articles, course notes, and presentations. It will begin with an introduction to graphics algorithms, and the languages PostScript and Java. ...
June 18, 2005 to June 22, 2005

Organizers: Sándor Kovács, Tony Pantev, and Ravi Vakil

Graduate Students from MSRI Sponsoring Institutions may benominated to participate in this program.
July 7, 2004 to July 20, 2004

Organizers: S. Boyer (UQAM), R. Fenn (Sussex), D. Rolfsen, Chair (UBC), D. Sjerve (UBC)

Open only to graduate students nominated by MSRI's Academic Sponsors Co-sponsored by MSRI and the Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences. The mathematical theory of knots has become one of the most active areas of mathematics in the last few ...
April 8, 2004 to April 13, 2004

Organizers: Sergey Yuzvinsky

This MSRI Summer Graduate Program at the University of Oregon will provide an introduction to the material to be covered in the fall, 2004 MSRI program on Hyperplane Arrangements and Applications. See the program page for more information on the content.
July 21, 2003 to July 31, 2003

Organizers: Jesús A. De Loera, Jörg Rambau, and Francisco Santos

Please note, MSRI's Summer Graduate Programs are open only to students nominated by MSRI's Academic Sponsor universities.
July 14, 2003 to July 25, 2003

Organizers: Bill Casselman and David Austin

Please note, MSRI's Summer Graduate Programs are open only to students nominated by MSRI's Academic Sponsor universities.
July 23, 2002 to August 9, 2002

Organizers: Stanley A. Berger, Giovanni P. Galdi (co-chair), Charles S. Peskin, Alfio Quarteroni, Anne M. Robertson (co-chair), Adélia Sequeira, and Howard Yonas

Summer Graduate Program -- open only to students nominated by MSRI's Academic Sponsor universities.
June 17, 2002 to June 28, 2002

Organizers: Peter Borwein and Michael Filaseta

Summer Graduate Program -- open only to students nominated by MSRI's Academic Sponsor universities, to be held in Vancouver, BC, Canada at the Pacific Institute of Mathematics facility of Simon Fraser University.
July 10, 2000 to July 21, 2000

Organizers: Elwyn Berlekamp and David Wolfe

A two-week short course on the mathematics of combinatorial games will be held at MSRI on July 10-21, 2000. Lead instructors will be Prof. E. Berlekamp of UC Berkeley and Prof. David Wolfe of Gustavus Adalphus College, St. Peter, MN. There will also be two ...
June 12, 2000 to June 23, 2000

Organizers: Nicholas R. Cozzarelli, Michael Levitt, Wilma Olson, De Witt Sumners

July 12, 1999 to July 23, 1999

Organizers: Robert Bryant and Jeanne N. Clelland

June 21, 1999 to July 2, 1999

Organizers: Anette Hosoi and L. Mahadevan

June 16, 1997 to June 27, 1997

Organizers: Neal Koblitz, Alfred Menezes

July 15, 1996 to July 26, 1996

Organizers: Dave Bayer, Ilan Vardi, John Strain

July 24, 1995 to August 4, 1995

Organizers: Persi Diaconis, Laurent Saloff-Coste

August 1, 1994 to August 12, 1994

Organizers: William P. Thurston, Jane Gilman, David Epstein

July 28, 1993 to August 10, 1993

Organizers: Dan Bump, Dinakar Ramakrishnan

July 1, 1992 to September 1, 1992

Organizers: N. Kopell, C. Peskin, M. Reed (chairman), J. Rinzel

July 8, 1991 to July 18, 1991

Organizers: Rob Kirby, Ron Stern