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This book does a superlative job of demonstrating the richness of the
theory of wavelets, which began as an outgrowth of classical harmonic
analysis. The authors have demonstrated further connections with spectral
theory, ergodic theory, homotopy theory and the theory of
probability---just to name a few of the well-established areas of
mathematics which are shown to touch the theory of wavelets. At the same
time the material is beautifully documented by means of 61 figures,
numerous tables and other illustrations which are freely distributed
throughout the book. An exhaustive list of 200 references to the most
current literature ensures scholarly care and the most up-to-date account
of the topics covered.
The authors succeed admirably in achieving the two-fold purpose of the
book. On the one hand the goal is to give a modern (but "timeless")
presentation of wavelet theory while on the other hand the goal is to
present new results that have not previously been published. The latter
include material on homotopy of resolutions, approximation theory and
results on the spectrum of the associated transfer operators and
subdivision operators. The first goal is well-served by the many
well-documented exercises which appear at the end of each chapter. The
pedagogy is further enhanced by several paragraphs of illuminating prose
at the beginning of each chapter--to set the stage for the technical
material to follow. Although not written as a conventional text, one would
expect that an industrious graduate student could profit enormously from a
serious exposure to this book.
With respect to the literature on wavelets, it is difficult to recall any
other book that is so well documented both with graphical and numerical
details as well as mathematical proof. This volume will remain a central
reference work for many years to come.
Mark Pinsky,
Northwestern University
...
1- The book covers the theory of wavelets from the point of view of operators and functional analysis and will appeal to a growing number of pure as well as applied mathematicians interested in the subject.
2- The writing of the book is very appealing: every chapter starts by a tutorial that gives motivation as well as intuition. It is then followed by a very clean mathematical development of the subject, together with many examples, figures, and applications from physics and engineering. A set of nice problems is provided at the end of each chapter. Thus this book can be used as a graduate textbook or for mathematical seminars in mathematics departments.
3- This book can even be used by experts in wavelet theory for learning about recent developments and new perspectives from operator theory and functional analysis.
I highly recommend this book.
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