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The mathematical theory of networks and systems has a long, and
rich history, with antecedents in circuit synthesis and the
analysis, design and synthesis of actuators, sensors and active
elements in both electrical and mechanical systems. Fundamental
paradigms such as the state-space real ization of an input/output
system, or the use of feedback to prescribe the behavior of a
closed-loop system have proved to be as resilient to change as were
the practitioners who used them. This volume celebrates the
resiliency to change of the fundamental con cepts underlying the
mathematical theory of networks and systems. The articles presented
here are among those presented as plenary addresses, invited
addresses and minisymposia presented at the 12th International
Symposium on the Mathematical Theory of Networks and Systems, held
in St. Louis, Missouri from June 24 - 28, 1996. Incorporating
models and methods drawn from biology, computing, materials science
and math ematics, these articles have been written by leading
researchers who are on the vanguard of the development of systems,
control and estimation for the next century, as evidenced by the
application of new methodologies in distributed parameter systems,
linear nonlinear systems and stochastic sys tems for solving
problems in areas such as aircraft design, circuit simulation,
imaging, speech synthesis and visionics."
The purpose of this annual series, Applied and Computational
Control, Signals, and Circuits, is to keep abreast of the
fast-paced developments in computational mathematics and scientific
computing and their increasing use by researchers and engineers in
control, signals, and circuits. The series is dedicated to
fostering effective communication between mathematicians, computer
scientists, computational scientists, software engineers,
theorists, and practicing engineers. This interdisciplinary scope
is meant to blend areas of mathematics (such as linear algebra,
operator theory, and certain branches of analysis) and
computational mathematics (numerical linear algebra, numerical
differential equations, large scale and parallel matrix
computations, numerical optimization) with control and systems
theory, signal and image processing, and circuit analysis and
design. The disciplines mentioned above have long enjoyed a natural
synergy. There are distinguished journals in the fields of control
and systems the ory, as well as signal processing and circuit
theory, which publish high quality papers on mathematical and
engineering aspects of these areas; however, articles on their
computational and applications aspects appear only sporadically. At
the same time, there has been tremendous recent growth and
development of computational mathematics, scientific comput ing,
and mathematical software, and the resulting sophisticated
techniques are being gradually adapted by engineers, software
designers, and other scientists to the needs of those applied
disciplines."
The mathematical theory of networks and systems has a long, and
rich history, with antecedents in circuit synthesis and the
analysis, design and synthesis of actuators, sensors and active
elements in both electrical and mechanical systems. Fundamental
paradigms such as the state-space real ization of an input/output
system, or the use of feedback to prescribe the behavior of a
closed-loop system have proved to be as resilient to change as were
the practitioners who used them. This volume celebrates the
resiliency to change of the fundamental con cepts underlying the
mathematical theory of networks and systems. The articles presented
here are among those presented as plenary addresses, invited
addresses and minisymposia presented at the 12th International
Symposium on the Mathematical Theory of Networks and Systems, held
in St. Louis, Missouri from June 24 - 28, 1996. Incorporating
models and methods drawn from biology, computing, materials science
and math ematics, these articles have been written by leading
researchers who are on the vanguard of the development of systems,
control and estimation for the next century, as evidenced by the
application of new methodologies in distributed parameter systems,
linear nonlinear systems and stochastic sys tems for solving
problems in areas such as aircraft design, circuit simulation,
imaging, speech synthesis and visionics."
The purpose of this annual series, Applied and Computational
Control, Signals, and Circuits, is to keep abreast of the
fast-paced developments in computational mathematics and scientific
computing and their increasing use by researchers and engineers in
control, signals, and circuits. The series is dedicated to
fostering effective communication between mathematicians, computer
scientists, computational scientists, software engineers,
theorists, and practicing engineers. This interdisciplinary scope
is meant to blend areas of mathematics (such as linear algebra,
operator theory, and certain branches of analysis) and
computational mathematics (numerical linear algebra, numerical
differential equations, large scale and parallel matrix
computations, numerical optimization) with control and systems
theory, signal and image processing, and circuit analysis and
design. The disciplines mentioned above have long enjoyed a natural
synergy. There are distinguished journals in the fields of control
and systems the ory, as well as signal processing and circuit
theory, which publish high quality papers on mathematical and
engineering aspects of these areas; however, articles on their
computational and applications aspects appear only sporadically. At
the same time, there has been tremendous recent growth and
development of computational mathematics, scientific comput ing,
and mathematical software, and the resulting sophisticated
techniques are being gradually adapted by engineers, software
designers, and other scientists to the needs of those applied
disciplines."
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