Abstract
The mathematical theory of optimal transportation is constantly expanding its range of application, while applications give impulses for new research directions in the field. This workshop was specifically devoted to applications of optimal transportation in the natural sciences, and to the recent developments of the theory that have been motivated by these. The bouquet of current applications includes mathematical models for large-scale air motion, dynamics of plasmas, material design, pattern formation in fluids, collective behaviour in biology, and many more. Related theoretical developments are in the analysis of the Hellinger-Kantorovich metric for modeling reaction-diffusion processes, and in efficient numerical methods for multi-marginal optimal transport, to name two of many examples encountered in this workshop.