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Henri Delannoy (1833 - 1915) [above],
William Allen Whitworth (1840 - 1905), and Désiré André (1850 - 1917),
fathers of lattice path theory
(with publications resp. in 1886, 1878, 1887,
motivated by the "ruin problem" and the "ballot problem"
of Pascal, de Moivre, Laplace, Bertrand, etc.) | |
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| Germain Kreweras (1918 - 1998),
one of the seminal contributors to lattice path theory.
He is, with Louis Comtet, Dominique Foata, and Marcel-Paul Schützenberger, the father of modern enumerative combinatorics in France.
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Throughout the years, the topics covered ranges over wide but related varieties like lattice path and other combinatorial problems, q-calculus, orthogonal polynomials, plane partitions, Stirling numbers,
hypergeometric functions, partial orders, spanning surfaces, generating functions, recurrence relations,
bijectivity, algebraic geometry, asymptotics, random walks, nonparametric inference, discrete distributions, urn models, queueing theory, quality control and other fields of applications such as probability,
statistics, physics, psychology, management science and computer science. In Greece Conference, the
title changed to Lattice Path Combinatorics and Discrete Distributions in order to emphasize the “Discrete Distributions” content.
A new initiative started by dedicating the Fourth Conference at Wien to the memory of Germain Kreweras (1918 - 1998) and
Tadepalli Venkata Narayana (1930 - 1987), both of whom made a significant contribution to the field. In the
same spirit, the 2002 conference was dedicated to the memory of István Vincze (1912 - 1999).
The 2015 conference was dedicated to Shreeram Shankar Abhyankar (1930 - 2013),
Philippe Flajolet (1948 - 2011), and Lajos Takács (1924 - 2015).
The number of participants was remarkably steady to be 60 - 70.
It allowed us a format of conference alloting around 25 minutes to each paper.
They were also instructional lectures of longer duration, reviewing topics of current interest.
The conferences were typically of two and a half day duration and the organizers have so far been able to arrange some entertainment programmes and sometimes after-dinner speakers. Let us for example here mention the "Mathemagics" show of our colleague Arthur Benjamin at the 2015 conference at Pomona, or the Catalan vs Fibonacci football match at Siena!
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Philippe Flajolet (1948 - 2011)
developed analytic methods in enumerative and asymptotic combinatorics, and worked on links between lattice paths and continued fractions, with applications to computer science, statistical mechanics... | |
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Lajos Takács (1924 - 2015)
did numerous contributions to lattice path theory,
in link with queueing theory and Brownian motion, similarly to other great probabilists like William Feller or Sparre Andersen. |
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