News Release

Herbert Edelsbrunner awarded ERC Advanced Grant

IST Austria Professor receives prestigious European Research Council funding award

Grant and Award Announcement

Institute of Science and Technology Austria

Herbert Edelsbrunner, Institute of Science and Technology Austria

image: Herbert Edelsbrunner, professor at IST Austria, receives an Advanced Grant of the ERC. view more 

Credit: IST Austria/Nadine Poncioni

In the latest round of funding awards, Herbert Edelsbrunner, a mathematician and computer scientist, received an ERC Advanced Grant. With an average success rate of around 12%, these grants are a testament to the quality of the work of those who receive them, as well as the innovation and expected impact of their research plans. Edelsbrunner, a professor at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (IST Austria) since 2009, uses topology, algorithms, and computer software to answer questions related to the recognition, matching, and classification of shape that arise in a variety of applications, from scientific visualization to molecular structure.

ERC grants provide long-term funding for ground-breaking, curiosity-driven research, and Edelsbrunner's project is no exception. In his project, "Alpha Shape Theory Extended", he will work to fully develop a larger theory that unites several of the topics that he has worked on before: alpha shapes, wrap complexes, and persistent homology. Alpha shapes are way of connecting points defined by Edelsbrunner and his collaborators in the 1980s, and they played a key role in sophisticated analyses of molecular structures. The wrap complex was instrumental in getting fast and accurate geometric software for surface reconstruction that emerged in the late 1990s. Alpha shapes and wrap complexes motivated Edelsbrunner's work developing persistent homology, a method for determining topological features at different scales. Persistent homology is the most important method in topological data analysis (TDA), and--given its increasing reach, complexity, and versatility--is likely to remain so in the future. A framework unifying these concepts would broaden and deepen the existing theory, and enable new applications in science, including medicine and biology, as well as to abstract or very high-dimensional data, such as text or language. For instance, Edelsbrunner, together with students and other collaborators, is already working on text applications and developing the necessary extensions in TDA.

Thomas Henzinger, President of IST Austria, congratulates the awardee: "Herbert Edelsbrunner's work exemplifies both the high quality and the interdisciplinary nature of the research performed on campus, and I look forward to seeing further connections between the mathematical and experimental sciences--one of the Institute's characteristic strengths."

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About IST Austria - http://www.ist.ac.at

The Institute of Science and Technology (IST Austria) is a PhD-granting research institution located in Klosterneuburg, 18 km from the center of Vienna, Austria. Inaugurated in 2009, the Institute is dedicated to basic research in the natural and mathematical sciences. IST Austria employs professors on a tenure-track system, postdoctoral fellows, and doctoral students. While dedicated to the principle of curiosity-driven research, the Institute owns the rights to all scientific discoveries and is committed to promote their use. The first president of IST Austria is Thomas A. Henzinger, a leading computer scientist and former professor at the University of California in Berkeley, USA, and the EPFL in Lausanne, Switzerland. The graduate school of IST Austria offers fully-funded PhD positions to highly qualified candidates with a bachelor's or master's degree in biology, neuroscience, mathematics, computer science, physics, and related areas.


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