Luckily, we still do have good conferences around and they tend to be organized by established institutes and professional organisations. For me, I have been following conferences organized by Institute of Advanced Study, Nanyang Technological University down south in Singapore. The institute has been promoting the work in fundamental sciences and their conferences tend to invite luminaries including Nobel Laureates and Fields Medalists. My colleagues, students and I were fortunate to be at two of them earlier this year. The first is a Memorial Conference for Robert Brout, January 16-19, 2018, whose speakers include Nobel Laureate Francois Englert co-discoverer of spontaneous symmetry breaking with the late Robert Brout and Peter Higgs. Other Nobel Laureates who came are David Gross, Duncan Haldane and Gerard 't Hooft plus a Fields medalist,Michael Atiyah. Below are some memorable photos.
During the first day dinner:
During the banquet dinner. I was happy to meet my Part III lecturer, Malcolm Perry (together with Edward Teo)
Finally our group photo:
Most of the conferences I went to in IAS, NTU had the generous partial support of IAS, to which we are grateful (colleagues, students and I). It is amazing that they are able to run such serious high-level conference and yet support many participants. I sincerely wish that we could do just even a fraction of what they do, noting that they had access to more funds than we do.
Earlier when we had Michel Planat visiting us in INSPEM (see pics below), we were discussing the possibility of going together to Group 32, a well-known series of conference on Group-Theoretic Methods in Physics. Have been once to the one held in Chern Institute, Tianjin in 2012. That conference was very generous to its participants - had my local expenses paid for, thanks to the recommendation of late Prof.Twareque. It is the kind of serious conference that I would love to be associated with. Unfortunately I could not get the local support needed for Group 32 and thus was hoping then that I could get a research grant in time instead. I was also invited by Michel to visit FEMTO as he is about to retire. As time went on, it was clear that I could not get the grant (if successful) in time and decided not to go (if I did, I will use up all my savings).
Unable to go to Group 32, there was another conference that the Director asked me to go instead of her. It is the International Conference on Applied Analysis and Mathematical Modeling (ICAAMM 2018) held in Istanbul on 20-24 June 2018. This conference series began as a cooperation between Malaysian and Turkish mathematical scientists in which our institute was heavily involved. Not having gone to the conference series before, there was hesitation in the beginning, partly due to the conference is almost immediately after 'Eid. Given that I have never been to Turkey and that the organizing committee is supporting the local expenses (travel was supported by the institute), I finally said yes to the invitation and I'm glad that I did. My presentation there spurred some discussions, met nice mathematicians there and got to see historic places. Here are some pics:
It would have been nice to bring my family there. In fact, they wanted to go given that the conference coincides with school holidays. Alas, I don't have that much savings to do so and even I had to forego my third son's back treatment (together with my own), sadly (will need to rely on self-exercises). Anyway, I hope I will have another opportunity with perhaps better financial situation. Anyway, this Istanbul trip is very much a working trip; we managed to squeeze in time to visit our MoU partner, Yildicz Technical University (see pic below).
Early next month, I will go to yet another conference, one that is co-organized by the institute. This is the International Quantitative Research and Applications Conference (IQRAC2018). It is a new conference initiated by Malaysian Academy of Mathematical Scientists (AISMM). As a new conference, it is going to be challenging to put up a community of followers and to make it as a conference that matters particularly for the regional community. I hope to follow this conference closely and wished it to be successful. One worries these days that one's conference is not taken seriously by others given the proliferation of conferences. In fact recently, there is an article raising the issue of "the proliferation of questionable conferences". This brings back to the point I made in the first paragraph of this post: let us make our conferences meaningful by taking scientific interactions as the main goal.
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