Albert Cohen (born 29 June 1965 in Paris) is a French mathematician, specializing in approximation theory, numerical analysis, and digital signal processing. He is, through maternal descent, the grand-nephew of the physicist Jacques Solomon. From 1984 to 1987 Albert Cohen was a student at the École Polytechnique. In 1990 he defended his doctoral thesis at Paris Dauphine University. His thesis, written under the supervision of Yves Meyer, is entitled Ondelettes, analyse multi résolution et traitement numérique du signal (Wavelets, multiresolution analysis and digital signal analysis) From 1990 to 1991 Cohen was a postdoc at Bell Laboratories at Murray Hill. He completed his habilitation in 1992 at Paris Dauphine University. From 1993 to 1995 he worked at ENSTA Paris. Since 1995 he has been a professor at the Laboratoire Jacques-Louis Lions of Pierre and Marie Curie University (Paris 6), which is a component of Sorbonne University. He is the author of 3 books and the author of co-author of over 100 research articles. Cohen developed in 1990, with Ingrid Daubechies and Jean-Christophe Feauveau, the first biorthogonal bases for wavelets; this research has an important application in the image compression standard JPEG-2000. With Wolfgang Dahmen and Ronald DeVore, Cohen then worked on the analysis of nonlinear and adaptive approximation methods, with a view to applications in learning theory and in numerical analysis of partial differential equations. He is interested in algorithmic problems involving a very large number of variables, which cause a prohibitive increase in the complexity of calculations. These problems arise in statistical learning theory, in the treatment of parametric and stochastic partial differential equations, and in the development of response surfaces from computer software involving adaptive numerical methods. In 2000 Cohen received the grand prix Jacques Herbrand from the French Academy of Sciences. In 1995 he won the V. A.