Professor 
Martin 
            Nowak will deliver the 
Coxeter Lecture Series. The Fields 
            Institute Coxeter Lecture Series (CLS) is intended to bring a leading 
            international mathematicia n in the field of the thematic program 
            of the Institute to give a series of three lectures. One talk will 
            be an overview to a general mathematical audience including post-doctoral 
            fellows and graduate students. The other two talks can target program 
            participants in their choice of topic(s), in collaboration with the 
            organizers of the related thematic program. 
            
Martin A. Nowak is Professor of Biology and of Mathematics at Harvard 
              University and Director of Harvards Program for Evolutionary 
              Dynamics. Dr. Nowak works on the mathematical description of evolutionary 
              processes including the evolution of cooperation and human language, 
              the dynamics of virus infections and human cancer. His major discoveries 
              include: the mechanism of HIV disease progression (1991), spatial 
              game dynamics (1992), generous tit-for-tat and win-stay,lose-shift 
              (1993), the rapid turnover and evolution of drug resistance in HIV 
              infection (1995), quantifying the dynamics of HBV infection (1996), 
              mechanisms for the evolution of genetic redundancy (1997), the evolution 
              of cooperation by indirect reciprocity (1998), the first mathematical 
              approach for studying the evolution of human language (1999-2002), 
              evolutionary game dynamics in finite populations and the 1/3 rule 
              (2004), evolutionary graph theory (2005), the first quantification 
              of the in vivo kinetics of a human cancer (2005), and five rules 
              for the evolution of cooperation (2006). At the moment he is working 
              on prelife, which is a formal approach to study the 
              origin of evolution.
            An Austrian by birth, he studied biochemistry and mathematics at 
              the University of Vienna with Peter Schuster and Karl Sigmund. He 
              received his Ph.D. sub auspiciis praesidentis in 1989. He went on 
              to the University of Oxford as an Erwin Schrödinger Scholar 
              and worked there with Robert May, the later Lord May of Oxford, 
              with whom he co-authored numerous articles and his first book, Virus 
              Dynamics (OUP, 2000). Nowak was Guy Newton Junior Research Fellow 
              at Wolfson College and later Welcome Trust Senior Research Fellow 
              in Biomedical Sciences and E. P. Abraham Junior Research Fellow 
              at Keble College. Dr. Nowak became head of the mathematical biology 
              group in Oxford in 1995 and Professor of Mathematical Biology in 
              1997. A year later he moved to Princeton to establish the first 
              program in theoretical biology at the Institute for Advanced Study. 
              He accepted his present position at Harvard University in 2003. 
            
            A corresponding member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Dr. 
              Nowak is the recipient of Oxfords Weldon Memorial Prize, the 
              Albert Wander Prize given by the University of Bern, the Akira Okubo 
              Prize of the Society for Mathematical Biology, the Roger E. Murray 
              Prize awarded by the Institute for Quantitative Research in Finance, 
              the David Starr Jordan Prize given jointly by Stanford, Cornell, 
              and Indiana universities, and the Henry Dale Prize of The Royal 
              Institution, London. He has delivered numerous lectures in the United 
              Kingdom, Europe, and the United States and is a former member of 
              the Templeton Foundation Board of Advisors. Dr. Nowak is the author 
              of more than 250 papers published in scientific journals. His latest 
              book, Evolutionary Dynamics, which was published by Harvard University 
              Press last year, provides an overview of the powerful yet simple 
              laws that govern the evolution of living systems.