Abstract
Information theory is the richer for a surge of recent
advances in relevant mathematical techniques.
The workshop fostered an exchange of ideas on new
mathematical tools which are typically outside the classical
toolbox of information theorists and that are yet useful in solving
classical and modern problems in information theory and related
areas. The focus was on
mathematical techniques that are of a general nature and that could benefit a
wide class of problems. A number of broad mathematical areas were identified
that held promise with established early successes, and key contributors
were invited to make presentations and initiate discussions
with an emphasis on emergent topics. The areas were:
information measures, measure concentration, hypercontractivity and
correlation measures, Shannon theory and extremal combinatorics,
advanced tools for proving converse results in coding theorems, and
recent techniques for proving Gaussian optimality entailing new
characterizations of Gaussian distributions.