8:30 a.m. Singular-value decay of Weyl operators. Christopher Heil*, Georgia Institute of Technology
Jay Ramanthan, Eastern Michigan University
Pankaj N. Topiwala, The MITRE Corporation, Bedford, Massachusetts
(889-42-559)
9:00 a.m. On the L^P-solutions of the two scalar dilation equations. Ka-Sing Lau*, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh
Mang Fai Ma, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh
Jianrong Wang, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh
(889-42-345)
9:30 a.m. Gibbs' phenomenon in wavelet expansions and what to do about it. G. G. Walter*, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
H.-T. Shim, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
(889-40-260)
10:00 a.m. Littlewood-Paley theory and wavelets in polar coordinates. Jay Epperson, University of New Mexico
Michael Frazier*, Michigan State University
(889-41-190)
10:30 a.m. Smooth localized orthonormal bases. Mladen Victor Wickerhauser*, Washington University
(889-42-795)
2:15 p.m. Nonlinear waveletpackets. John J. Benedetto*, University of Maryland, College Park
Sandra Saliani, University of Potenza, Italy
(889-42-113)
2:45 p.m. Some applications of wavelets in medical imaging. Dennis Healy*, Dartmouth College
(889-42-772)
3:15 p.m. Chaos in adaptive time-frequency decompositions. Geoffrey M. Davis*, New York University-Courant Institute
Stephane Mallat, New York University-Courant Institute
(889-42-796)
3:45 p.m. The FBI wavelet/scalar quantization gray-scale fingerprint image compression standard. Jon Bradley, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Chris Brislawn*, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Tom Hopper, Federal Bureau of Investigation
(889-94-04)
4:15 p.m. Multiresolution representation of data. Ami Harten*, Tel-Aviv University, Israel and University of California, Los Angeles
(889-99-800)
4:45 p.m. L^p multipliers and wavelets. E. Berkson, University of Illinois
M. Paluszynski, Wroclav University, Poland
Guido Weiss*, Washington University
(889-42-799)
9:00 a.m. Fast wavelet based algorithms for initial value problems. Stanley Osher*, University of California, Los Angeles
(889-42-86)
9:30 a.m. A new technique to determine the regularity of wavelets. Ingrid Daubechies*, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
(889-42-487)
10:00 a.m. Multiresolution analysis on nonsmooth sets in bold R^n. Bj\"orn Jawerth*, University of South Carolina, Columbia
(889-42-711)
10:30 a.m. Applications of wavelets to signal and image processing. Ronald A. DeVore, University of South Carolina, Columbia
Bradley J. Lucier*, Purdue University, West Lafayette
(889-94-684)
2:15 p.m. Construction wavelets using fractal interpolation functions. G. Donovan, Georgia Institute of Technology
J. S. Geronimo, Vanderbilt University
D. P. Hardin*, Vanderbilt University
P. R. Massopust, Sam Houston State University
(889-41-707)
2:45 p.m. Construction of smooth wavelets using fractal interpolation functions. J. S. Geronimo*, Georgia Institute of Technology
G. Donovan, Georgia Institute of Technology
Doug Hardin, Georgia Institute of Technology
(889-41-440)
3:15 p.m. Analytic wavelets generated by radial functions. J. Stockler, University Duisburg, Germany
C. K. Chui, Texas A & M University, College Station
J. D. Ward*, Texas A & M University, College Station
(889-41-101)
3:45 p.m. Irregular sampling in higher dimensions and multisensor deconvolution. David F. Walnut*, George Mason University
(889-42-116)