2019 AUT Mathematical Sciences Symposium

Date: Thursday 21 Nov, 9am - Friday 22 Nov, 6pm
Location: AUT City Campus
WF Building, WF710 and WF711
Auckland
New Zealand
Contact: msrg@aut.ac.nz
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2019 AUT Mathematical Sciences Symposium 11/21/2019 09:00 11/22/2019 18:00 The Mathematical Sciences Research Group (MSRG), Department of Mathematical Sciences, School of Engineering, Computer and Mathematical Sciences, Auckland Univer AUT City Campus, WF Building, WF710 and WF711, Auckland , New Zealand
Mathematical-Science-Research-Symposium-Building

The Mathematical Sciences Research Group (MSRG), Department of Mathematical Sciences, School of Engineering, Computer and Mathematical Sciences, Auckland University of Technology is hosting a symposium between Thursday 21 November and Friday 22 November 2019.

Download schedule and abstract booklet

Invited speakers

The following invited speakers have been confirmed:

  • Boris Choy, University of Sydney, Australia
  • Simona Fabrizi, University of Auckland, New Zealand
  • Rachel Fewster, University of Auckland, New Zealand
  • Andreas W. Kempa-Liehr, University of Auckland, New Zealand
  • Fabien Montiel, University of Otago, New Zealand
  • Thomas Yee, University of Auckland, New Zealand

Contributed talks

We welcome contributed talks (20 minutes) from the mathematical sciences community. Submit your abstract of up to 250 words by Monday 11 November.

Topics

  • Statistical programming
  • Statistical methodology
  • Stochastic modelling
  • Data science
  • Computational and mathematical modelling
  • Financial analytics
  • Financial mathematics
  • Decision analysis
  • Structural dynamics

Registration

Registrations are now closed.

Symposium dinner

The dinner is at the Four Seasons restaurant on Thursday 21 November at 6.30pm. It is free of charge for speakers but guests will pay $50 for the 3-course meal.

Organising committee

  • Jiling Cao
  • Sarah Marshall
  • Victor Miranda
  • Nuttanan Wichitaksorn
  • Wenjun Zhang

More information about the Mathematical Sciences Research Group