[Mathematical Sciences for the Future] Exploration of New Science Using Mathematics to Predict and Control the Future

Strategic Objective

Scientific prediction and control as the foundation of a new society and industry

Research Supervisor

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Zin Arai(Professor, School of Computing, Institute of Science Tokyo)

Overview

 In addressing escalating social issues on a global scale and the emergence of new real-world problems, there is an urgent need to protect and nurture Earth as global commons, ensuring our safety and security. Achieving this requires the utilization of all available information and data to detect threats and changes in circumstances early, including societal challenges. We must construct new societal infrastructure capable of optimal decision-making and response.
 This inevitably involves ‘prediction’; to predict and avoid transitioning to irreversibly adverse states, we need to elucidate and analyze complex natural and social phenomena and accurately identify significant indicators and critical transition points. Furthermore, based on such predictions, we need ‘control’; it is crucial to create new theories and innovative technologies that ultimately lead to (or maintain) a more desirable state by intervening in the predicted events. From a sustainability perspective, it is critical to avoid allocating resources towards unattainable goals; therefore, examining the feasibility of predicting and controlling the phenomena in question is also essential.
 In this research area, we aim to create foundational theories linking the elucidation and analysis of complex phenomena and diverse data related to social issues through abstraction and visualization using mathematics and mathematical sciences. Our goal is the prediction and control of these phenomena.
 Specifically, we try to extract mathematical structures from the phenomena that constitute social challenges and explore variables that explain causality and principal factors related to the origin and critical transition of the phenomena. Furthermore, leveraging specialized knowledge about these phenomena, we will focus on verifying and demonstrating the plausibility of the mathematical structures and assessing the feasibility of prediction and control based on them.

Research Area Advisors

Shingo Iwami Professor, Graduate School of Science, Nagoya University
Takayuki Osogami Senior Technical Staff Member, IBM Research - Tokyo, IBM Japan, Ltd.
Shizuo Kaji Professor, Institute of Mathematics for Industry, Kyushu University
Yoshinobu Kawahara Professor, Graduate School of Information Science and Technology, Osaka University
Hideyuki Suzuki Professor, Graduate School of Information Science and Technology, Osaka University
Asuka Takatsu Associate Professor, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Tokyo Metropolitan University
Masaki Tsukamoto Professor, Graduate school of Science, Kyoto University
Katsuhiro Nishinari Professor, School of Engineering, University of Tokyo
Kazuhisa Makino Professor, Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences, Kyoto University

Research Projects

  1. Year Started : 2024

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Program

  • CREST
  • PRESTO
  • ERATO
  • ACT-X
  • ALCA
  • CRONOS
  • AIP Network Lab
  • Global Activities
  • Diversity
  • SDGs
  • OSpolicy
  • Yuugu
  • Questions