Speakers are invited to submit 
    abstracts for presentation at the symposium. 
     
    
    Of special interest are presentations 
    that link deep mathematical theories to problems in contemporary IT (may not 
    be typically taught to IT professionals). Some 
    examples may include presentations on wavelet theory of Yves Meyer, and the work of Dan Spielman, 
    which includes many groundbreaking contributions to theoretical computer 
    science, from convex analysis and polytopes, to error correcting codes, to 
    numerical analysis. 
      
    
    Yves Meyer's work in harmonic analysis 
    led him to work on wavelets. He contributed greatly to the singular integral 
    operator theory which resulted in enormous progress in wavelet theory and 
    its applications. He was awarded the Gauss Prize for his contributions in 
    2010.
     
    
    The characteristic of Dan Spielman's 
    work is the beautiful interface between theory and practice, be it in 
    mathematical programming, error-correcting codes, the search for Ramanujan- 
    quality sparsifers, the analysis of algorithms, computational complexity 
    theory, or numerical analysis. He won the Nevanlinna Prize for his 
    contributions in 2010.
      
    
    Other examples are the work of Peter W. 
    Shor in quantum computation, computational geometry, and the work of Timothy 
    Gowers connecting functional analysis with combinatorics, and Jon 
    Klienberg's work on networks and information.