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Japanese mathematics (和算, wasan) denotes a distinct kind of mathematics which was developed in Japan during the Edo period (1603–1867). The term wasan , from wa ("Japanese") and san ("calculation"), was coined in the 1870s [ 1 ] and employed to distinguish native Japanese mathematical theory from Western mathematics (洋算 yōsan ).
The Mathematical Society of Japan (MSJ, Japanese: 日本数学会) is a learned society for mathematics in Japan. In 1877, the organization was established as the Tokyo Sugaku Kaisha and was the first academic society in Japan. It was re-organized and re-established in its present form in 1946.
Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education; Journal of Nonlinear Mathematical Physics; Journal of Number Theory; Journal of Online Mathematics and its Applications; Journal of Physics A; Journal of Recreational Mathematics; Journal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment; Journal of Symbolic Computation; Journal of Symbolic Logic
EASIAM (East Asia Section of SIAM) aims to advance the studies of applied mathematics in eastern Asia. As part of the Eastern Asian community, JSIAM is partially supporting EASIAM. Within their support, EASIAM is publishing the East Asian Journal of Applied Mathematics from the Global Science Press, [5] and hold the EASIAM conference every year ...
Kümmerle, Harald (2018), "Hayashi Tsuruichi and the success of the Tôhoku Mathematical Journal as a publication", in Ogawa, T.; Morimoto, M. (eds.), Mathematics of Takebe Katahiro and History of Mathematics in East Asia, Advanced Studies in Pure Mathematics, vol. 79, Tokyo: Mathematical Society of Japan, pp. 347– 358
He has been a member of the Science Council of Japan since 2006, Board of Trustees of the Mathematical Society of Japan (2003–2007), the Editor in Chief of the Journal of the Mathematical Society of Japan (2002–2006), and currently is the Managing Editor of the Japanese Journal of Mathematics since 2006.
International Journal of Mathematics and Mathematical Sciences; International Journal of Shape Modeling; International Mathematics Research Notices;
Iyanaga was born in Tokyo, Japan on April 2, 1906. He studied at the University of Tokyo from 1926 to 1929. He studied under Teiji Takagi. As an undergraduate, he published two papers in the Japanese Journal of Mathematics and the Proceedings of the Imperial Academy of Tokyo. Both of his papers appeared in print in 1928.