October 16, 2011
Sundays at 3 pm (doors open at 2:15)
MacLeod Auditorium, Medical Sciences Building,
University of Toronto
1 Kings College Circle (Nearest Subway is Queens
Park Station)
Co-sponsored by the Fields Institute
Keith Devlin
Stanford University
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Leonardo and Steve: How Fibonacci beat Apple to market by 800
Years
The first personal
computing revolution took place not in Silicon Valley in the 1980s
but in Pisa in the 13th Century. The medieval counterpart to Steve
Jobs was a young Italian called Leonardo, better known today by the
nickname Fibonacci. Thanks to a recently discovered manuscript in
a library in Florence, the story of how this little known genius came
to launch the modern commercial world can now be told.
Dr. Keith Devlin, mathematician, is a co-founder and Executive Director
of Stanford University's H-STAR institute, a co-founder of the Stanford
Media X research network, and a Senior Researcher at CSLI. He is a
World Economic Forum Fellow and a Fellow of the American Association
for the Advancement of Science. His current research is focused on
the use of different media to teach and communicate mathematics to
diverse audiences. He also works on the design of information/reasoning
systems for intelligence analysis. Other research interests include:
theory of information, models of reasoning, applications of mathematical
techniques in the study of communication, and mathematical cognition.
He has written 31 books and over 80 published research articles. Recipient
of the Pythagoras Prize, the Peano Prize, the Carl Sagan Award, and
the Joint Policy Board for Mathematics Communications Award. In 2003,
he was recognized by the California State Assembly for his "innovative
work and longtime service in the field of mathematics and its relation
to logic and linguistics." He is "the Math Guy" on
National Public Radio.
Airing on TVO, Ontario's public television network:
5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, December 17 and 18, 2011
1:30 a.m. Friday, December 23, 2011
5:00 a.m. Saturday and Sunday, December 24 and 25, 2011
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