David Blecher (Houston)
    'Interpolating' between Hilbert space operators, and real positivity 
    for operator algebras 
   
    With Charles Read we have introduced and studied a new notion of (real) 
      positivity in operator algebras, with an eye to extending certain $C^*$-algebraic 
      results and theories to more general algebras. As motivation note that the 
      `completely' real positive maps on C*-algebras or operator systems are precisely 
      the completely positive maps in the usual sense; however with real positivity 
      one may develop a useful order theory for more general spaces and algebras. 
      This is intimately connected to new relationships between an operator algebra 
      and the C*-algebra it generates, and in particular what to we call noncommutative 
      peak interpolation, and noncommutative peak sets. We report on the state 
      of this theory (joint work with Read, ome in progress at the time of writing) 
      and on the parts of it that generalize further to certain classes of Banach 
      algebras (joint work with N. Ozawa).
        
  
  Ken Davidson (Waterloo)
    Semicrossed products over semigroups
  
   
    If $P$ is a subsemigroup of a group $G$ that acts on a C*-algebra $A$ by 
      $*$-endomorphisms, we construct the semicrossed product, which is a universal 
      nonself-adjoint operator algebra with respect to some specified family of 
      covariant representations. We seek to identify the C*-envelope, which is 
      the smallest enveloping C*-algebra, as a crossed product of a related C*-algebra 
      $B$ by an automorphic action of $G$. This is accomplished in a number of 
      cases.
      This is joint work with Adam Fuller (U. Nebraska) and Evgenios Kakariadis 
      (Ben-Gurion U.).
      
  
  Ilijas Farah (York)
    A new tool for constructing nuclear C*-algebras 
   
    By combining old and new tools from model theory one can give unified proofs 
      of various permanence properties for C*-algebras defined by approximation 
      properties. These tools also provide new constructions of C*-algebras with 
      prescribed properties. This is a report on work in progress with several 
      coauthors, including B. Hart, M. Magidor, L. Robert and A. Tikuisis.
      
      
  
  Farzad Fathizadeh (Caltech and Western )
    Scalar Curvature and Gauss-Bonnet Theorem for Noncommutative Tori 
    Coauthors; Masoud Khalkhali 
   
    After the seminal work of Connes and Tretkoff on the Gauss-Bonnet theorem 
      for the noncommutative two-torus, there have been significant developments 
      in understanding the local differential geometry of these C*-algebras equipped 
      with curved metrics. In this talk, I will review my joint works with M. 
      Khalkhali in which we extend this result to general translation invariant 
      conformal structures on noncommutative two-tori and compute the scalar curvature. 
      Our final formula for the curvature matches precisely with the one computed 
      independently by A. Connes and H. Moscovici. A purely noncommutative feature 
      in these works is the appearance of the modular automorphism from Tomita-Takesaki 
      theory in the computations and final formulas for the curvature. Time permitting 
      I shall also try to indicate an extension of these results to curved noncommutative 
      four tori. 
    
  
   Fereidoun Ghahramani (Manitoba)
    An introduction to approximate amenability for operator algebraists
    
  
 This talk is on basic material from theory of {\it approximate 
    amenability} and its branches that R.J. Loy and I introduced in the year 2000 
    and have been developing since then, sometimes with other colleagues: Y. Choi, 
    H.G. Dales, C.J. Read, E. Samei, and Y. Zhang. I have chosen the material 
    for the talk so that it might be interesting for operator algebraists. Although 
    some results to be presented are about operator algebras on Banach spaces, 
    the talk, however, will end up with some open questions on operator algebras 
    on Hilbert spaces. 
  
  Thierry Giordano (Ottawa)
    Purely infinite partial crossed products 
     
   
    Partial actions of a discrete group on C*-algebras and their associated 
      crossed products were introduced by Ruy Exel and Kevin McClanahan, and since 
      then have been developed by many authors. In a recent work, Adam Sierakowski 
      and I pursued the study of partial C*-dynamical systems and their associated 
      crossed products. In this talk I will report on some of the results we obtained.
      
      
  
  Guihua Gong (Puerto Rico)
    TBA 
    
  Matthew Kennedy (Carleton)
    Boundaries of reduced C*-algebras of discrete groups 
   
    For a discrete group G, we consider the minimal C*-algebra of $\ell^\infty(G)$ 
      that arises as the image of a unital positive G-equivariant projection. 
      This algebra always exists and is unique up to isomorphism. It is trivial 
      if and only if G is amenable. We prove that, more generally, it can be identified 
      with the C*-algebra of continuous functions on Furstenbergs universal 
      G-boundary. This operator-algebraic construction of the Furstenberg boundary 
      turns out to have some interesting consequences. In particular, it leads 
      to proof of a conjecture of Ozawa about nuclear embeddings of reduced C*-algebras 
      of exact groups.
    
  
  Masoud Khalkhali (Western)
    Spectral Geometry of Curved Noncommutative Tori 
    
   
    While the algebraic topology of noncommutative tori, as reflected in their 
      K-theory, cyclic cohomology and index theory, have been intensively studied 
      in the past three decades, much less is known about their geometry.
      Ideas of spectral geometry, even the very notion of Riemannian metric itself, 
      can often be imported to noncommutative geometry thanks to Connes' notion 
      of spectral triples. This gives an opening to geometric studies of noncommutative 
      spaces endowed with a suitable notion of curved metric. In this talk I shall 
      survey recent joint work with Farzad Fathizadeh, and the closely related 
      work of Connes-Tretkoff and Connes-Moscovici, on Gauss-Bonnet theorem and 
      the scalar curvature for curved
      noncommutative tori $A_{\theta}^n $ for $ n=2, 4.$ In dimension 2 the local 
      expression for curvature, as an element of the noncommutative torus, is 
      computed by evaluating the value of the (analytic continuation of the) spectral 
      zeta function $\zeta_a(s) = \text{Trace} (a |D|^{-s})$ at $s=0$ as a linear 
      functional in $ a\in C^{\infty}({T}_{\theta}^2)$. In higher dimensions scalar 
      curvature is related to the residue of the spectral zeta functions at its 
      subleading pole.
  
  
  
  Eberhard Kirchberg (HU Berlin)
    `Central sequence algebras with and without characters
   
    The ``corrected'' central sequence algebra F(A) of a separable C*-algebra 
      A contains basic information about properties of A. An important question 
      is: When F(A) is character-less? We report on two different aspects of this 
      questions that we study in papers with Mikael Rordam and with Hiroshi Ando. 
      E.g. we show that F(A) contains a unital C*-subalgebra that has B(H) as 
      a unital quotient if A is anti-liminal. We give examples where F(A) has 
      a character.
      If F(A) has no character then A has the strong corona factorization property 
      of Kucerovsky and Ng.
      Additional assumptions on $A$ , like a rather strong 2-splitting property 
      or divisibility and comparability properties, allow to show that
      F(A) contains the the Jiang-Su algebra Z unitally as subalgebra (i.e., A 
      absorbs Z tensorial) if F(A) has no character.
      
      
  
  James Mingo (Queens)
    Freeness and the Transpose
   
     Over twenty years ago Voiculescu showed that independent and unitarily 
      invariant random matrices are asymptotically free. Asymptotic freeness gives 
      universal rules for computing (asymptotically) the eigenvalue distribution 
      of sums and products of random matrices provided that one knows the individual 
      eigenvalue distribution.
    The requirement that the ensembles be unitarily invariant was lifted recently 
      but the requirement that the ensembles be independent has always been necessary 
      until a year ago when Mihai Popa and I showed that a matrix can be asymptotically 
      free from its transpose. Recently we have show that this can pushed to the 
      partial transposes of interest in quantum information theory.
      
  
  Magdalena Musat (Copenhagen)
    Factorizable completely positive maps and the Connes embedding problem
  Zhuang Niu (Wyoming)
    The C*-algebra of a minimal homeomorphism with zero mean dimension 
    
   
    Consider a minimal homeomorphism of a compact metrizable space, and assume 
      that it has zero mean topological dimension (a dynamical version of topological 
      covering dimension which was introduced by Lindenstrauss and Weiss). It 
      is shown that the crossed product C*-algebra absorbs Jiang-Su algebra tensorially. 
      This is a joint work with George A. Elliott.
      
  
  N. Christopher Phillips (Oregon)
    Examples of operator algebras on L^p spaces: Simplicity, uniqueness 
    theorems, and amenability
   
    We describe several classes of operator algebras on L^p spaces which, despite 
      not having an adjoint, share some good properties of C*-algebras, and about 
      which enough can be said to suggest that there may be a rich theory of such 
      algebras. Our examples include:
    L^p analogs of UHF and AF algebras.
      L^p analogs of Cuntz algebras.
      Full and reduced group L^p operator algebras.
      L^p operator crossed products, particularly by free minimal actions
      on compact metric spaces.
      The L^p analog of the C*-algebra of the unilateral shift.
    
    We consider simplicity, uniqueness results (analogous to those for the 
      Cuntz C*-algebras), pure infiniteness, K-theory, amenability, p-nuclearity, 
      and the relations between the structure of a group and L^p operator algebras 
      built using it. A great many open problems remain. (There is a pdf file 
      of some of them on the website of the 2014 GPOTS [Great Plains Operator 
      Theory Seminar], at
      http://www.math.ksu.edu/events/conference/gpots2014/LpOpAlgQuestions.pdf.)
    This talk is related to my recent talk at GPOTS, but differs substantially. 
      It has a different emphasis, and some of what I said in the earlier talk 
      is already out of date. (There is a TeX version of my GPOTS talk on the 
      conference website, at
      http://www.math.ksu.edu/events/conference/gpots2014/Phillips_loaq.)
  
  
   
    Mikael Pichot (McGill)
    TBA 
    
  Ian Putnam (Victoria)
    Smale spaces, their C*-algebras and a homology theory for them.
   
    I will describe some hyperbolic topological dynamical systems called Smale 
      spaces which were introduced by David Ruelle, giving a number of different 
      examples including shifts of finite type. I will discuss the construction 
      of various C*-algebras from these systems; in the case of shifts of finite 
      type these include the Cuntz-Krieger algebras and their AF cores. I will 
      also describe a homology theory for Smale spaces, why one might have been 
      looking for such a theory and how the C*-algebras provide a key ingredient 
      in the definition.
      
  
  Mikael Rørdam (Copenhagen)
    Elementary amenable groups have quasidiagonal C*-algebra
   
    Rosenberg proved in 1987 that if the C*-algebra of a discrete group is 
      quasidiagonal, then the group is amenable, and he conjectured that the converse 
      also holds. Using techniques from the classification of C*-algebras and 
      a description of elementary amenable groups due to Chou and Osin we confirm 
      Rosenberg's conjecture for elementary amenable groups. We also show that 
      these group C*-algebras are AF-embeddable. Our methods extend to show that 
      also group C*-algebras of amenable LEF groups are AF-embeddable.
    This is a joint work with N. Ozawa and Y. Sato.
      
  
  Zhong-Jin Ruan (Illinois)
    Exotic (Quantum) Group C*-algebras
    
  Volker Runde (Alberta)
    Dual Banach algebras - an overview 
   
     A dual Banach algebra is a Banach algebra that is also a dual Banach space 
      such that multiplication is separately weak* continuous. Von Neumann algebras 
      are dual Banach algebras, but so are the measure algebras of locally compact 
      groups. We discuss amenability properties for dual Banach algebras as well 
      as their surprisingly intricate representation theory.
      
  
  Luis Santiago (Aberdeen) 
    TBA 
    
  Aaron Tikuisis (Aberdeen)
    The dimension of approximately subhomogeneous C*-algebras 
    Coauthors : George Elliott, Luis Santiago, Wilhelm Winter 
  
   
    Viewed as a noncommutative topological space, it is quite sensible to try 
      to define the dimension of a C*-algebra, and many fruitful concepts have 
      arisen from doing so. I will focus on decomposition rank and ASH dimension, 
      two dimension-like invariants which are important to the classification 
      of C*-algebras. It is conjectured that for simple ASH algebras, the decomposition 
      rank and the ASH dimension always agree and lie in the range $\{0,1,2,\infty\}$. 
      This conjecture is closely related to the Toms-Winter conjecture and a revived 
      Elliott conjecture. It is moreover corroborated by various results, some 
      but not all of which use classification. I will discuss some new developments 
      related to this conjecture. 
  
  Andrew Toms (Purdue)
    Mean Dimension and crossed products
    
    Wilhelm Winter (Münster)
     Regularity of nuclear C*-algebras 
     
    
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