Frames are overcomplete sets of vectors that can be used to stably and faithfully decompose and reconstruct vectors in the underlying vector space. Frame theory stands at the intersection of many areas in mathematics such as functional and harmonic analysis, numerical analysis, matrix theory, numerical linear algebra, algebraic and differential geometry, probability, statistics, and convex geometry. At the same time its applications in engineering, medicine, computer science, and quantum computing are motivating new research problems in applied and pure mathematics. This volume is based on lec.
M. Fickus, B. Johnson, K. Kornelson, and K. Okoudjou, Convolutional frames and the frame potential, Appl. Comput. Harmon. Anal. 19 (2005), no. 1, 77–91. G. B. Folland, Real analysis, second ed., Pure and Applied Mathematics (New York), ...