Interested listeners in presence are suggested to contact the local organizing committee in advance (before February 28, 2026). A maximum of 18 listeners in presence will be selected. Attendance in presence (with catering) will be free for the selected participants and for the invited speakers (apart from those who will present online). In addition, free attendance online will be possible for other interested participants. Social dinner will be free only for the invited speakers.
The development and application of mathematical methods is crucial for network problems arising in fields such as international trade, logistics, and transportation. Such methods provide suitable frameworks to model, analyse, and improve the design of complex systems. For instance, optimization can be used to find the best possible solution according to a suitable performance index, such as determining the most efficient delivery routes, by minimizing a proper trade-off between costs and quality of service. Game theory can be exploited to model the strategic interactions of different players, like competing companies or data packets, to predict behavior and/or design protocols able to prevent network congestion. Machine learning and statistics can enable network agents to learn from data, allowing for dynamic predictions, such as real-time traffic forecasting. Finally, numerical analysis helps in solving large-scale network problems, especially when closed-form solutions are not available. This two-days interdisciplinary workshop will feature seminars by invited leading experts, presenting recent advances on mathematical methods for complex networks. Both theoretical and application-oriented seminars will be presented.
Topics: Topics of interest include (but are not limited to)
Mathematical games on networks.
Machine learning and statistics.
Numerical analysis.
Network optimization and resilience.
Applications to: international trade, logistics, routing, traffic forecasting, transportation.
The workshop will take place at IMT Lucca, Piazza San Francesco 19. It will feature the following Keynote Speakers:
Leonardo Badia (University of Padua), Full Professor in Telecommunications.
Raffaele Cerulli (University of Salerno), President of the Italian Association of Operations Research (AIRO), member of the Scientific Committee of the Italian Mathematical Union (UMI), and Full Professor in Operations Research.
The program will be available here.