There will also be a poster session for early-career researchers and graduate students.
Eric Bahuaud, Seattle University
Robert Bryant, Duke (Clay Mathematics Speaker)
Andreas Cap, University of Vienna
Jeffrey Case, Pennsylvania State University
Azahara de la Torre Pedraza, Sapienza University of Rome
Michael Eastwood, Australian National University
Nikolaos Eptaminitakis, Purdue
Dan Fox, Technical University of Madrid
Rod Gover, University of Auckland
Qing Han, Notre Dame
Kengo Hirachi, University of Tokyo
Andreas Karch, University of Texas at Austin
Claude LeBrun, Stony Brook University
John M. Lee, University of Washington
Yueh-Ju Lin, Wichita State University
Lionel Mason, Oxford
Rafe Mazzeo, Stanford
Richard Melrose, MIT
Paweł Nurowski, Polish Academy of Sciences
Jie Qing, University of California, Santa Cruz
Kostas Skenderis, University of Southampton
Andràs Vasy, Stanford
Andrew Waldron, University of California, Davis
Yi Wang, Johns Hopkins
Edward Witten, Institute for Advanced Study
Travis Willse, Guilford College
Maciej Zworski, University of California, Berkeley
Funding has largely already been disbursed, but participants may still request funding and might receive some as available; early-career researchers, women, and members of under-represented groups are particularly encouraged to apply.
Registration is available on the website at
https://personal.utdallas.edu/~sxm190098/graham65/ , which is also where further information will be available. A poster is available there. We hope to have lectures available live by zoom or other live-stream, and such information will be posted on the
website.
There will be a banquet on Thursday evening, which will cost $50 ($30 for graduate students).
If you wish to attend the banquet, you must register by this Wednesday at noon PDT.
Important COVID information: All attendees will have to provide proof of either COVID vaccination or a negative test within 72 hours of each day they are attending. Sufficient evidence includes a COVID
vaccination record card, printed or electronically presented COVID vaccination health record or, for those attending outside the United States, a reasonable equivalent of either. Negative test results (for the unvaccinated) must be PCR tests.
Sincerely,
Stephen E. McKeown, The University of Texas at Dallas