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This book contains plenary lectures given at the International
Conference on Mathematical and Computational Modeling,
Approximation and Simulation, dealing with three very different
problems: reduction of Runge and Gibbs phenomena, difficulties
arising when studying models that depend on the highly nonlinear
behaviour of a system of PDEs, and data fitting with truncated
hierarchical B-splines for the adaptive reconstruction of
industrial models. The book includes nine contributions, mostly
related to quasi-interpolation. This is a topic that continues to
register a high level of interest, both for those working in the
field of approximation theory and for those interested in its use
in a practical context. Two chapters address the construction of
quasi-interpolants, and three others focus on the use of
quasi-interpolation in solving integral equations. The remaining
four concern a problem related to the heat diffusion equation, new
results on the notion of convexity in probabilistic metric spaces
(which are applied to the study of the existence and uniqueness of
the solution of a Volterra equation), the use of smoothing splines
to address an economic problem and, finally, the analysis of
poverty measures, which is a topic of increased interest to
society. The book is addressed to researchers interested in Applied
Mathematics, with particular reference to the aforementioned
topics.
This book contains plenary lectures given at the International
Conference on Mathematical and Computational Modeling,
Approximation and Simulation, dealing with three very different
problems: reduction of Runge and Gibbs phenomena, difficulties
arising when studying models that depend on the highly nonlinear
behaviour of a system of PDEs, and data fitting with truncated
hierarchical B-splines for the adaptive reconstruction of
industrial models. The book includes nine contributions, mostly
related to quasi-interpolation. This is a topic that continues to
register a high level of interest, both for those working in the
field of approximation theory and for those interested in its use
in a practical context. Two chapters address the construction of
quasi-interpolants, and three others focus on the use of
quasi-interpolation in solving integral equations. The remaining
four concern a problem related to the heat diffusion equation, new
results on the notion of convexity in probabilistic metric spaces
(which are applied to the study of the existence and uniqueness of
the solution of a Volterra equation), the use of smoothing splines
to address an economic problem and, finally, the analysis of
poverty measures, which is a topic of increased interest to
society. The book is addressed to researchers interested in Applied
Mathematics, with particular reference to the aforementioned
topics.
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