[math-ias] Addendum: Mathematics Seminars -- Week of September 30, 2013
Anthony V. Pulido
apulido at ias.edu
Fri Sep 27 16:19:15 EDT 2013
Note 1: Two Non-equilibrium and Random Matrices talks added. Please see
below.
Note 2: Mathematics can now be displayed on the IAS seminar website. Please
go to http://www.math.ias.edu/seminars to see correctly displayed
mathematics.
-------
INSTITUTE FOR ADVANCED STUDY
School of Mathematics
Princeton, NJ 08540
Mathematics Seminars
Week of September 30, 2013
Monday, September 30
Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar I
Topic: Some provable bounds for deep learning
Speaker: Sanjeev Arora
Time/Room: 11:15am - 12:15pm/S-101
Abstract: See below
Short talks by postdoctoral members
Topic: The Newton stratification of Shimura varieties
Speaker: Arno Kret, University of Paris XI; Member, School of
Mathematics
Time/Room: 2:00pm - 2:15pm/S-101
Topic: \(G\)-valued flat deformations and local models
Speaker: Brandon Levin, Stanford University; Member, School of
Mathematics
Time/Room: 2:15pm - 2:30pm/S-101
Topic: Branching laws for representations of real reductive groups
Speaker: Yoshiki Oshima, University of Tokyo; Member, School of
Mathematics
Time/Room: 2:30pm - 2:45pm/S-101
Topic: Interactive Channel Capacity
Speaker: Gillat Kol, Weizmann Institute of Science; Member, School of
Mathematics
Time/Room: 4:00pm - 4:15pm/S-101
Topic: Cylindrical contact homology as a well-defined homology?
Speaker: Joanna Nelson, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Time/Room: 4:15pm - 4:30pm/S-101
Topic: Depth complexity and communication games
Speaker: Or Meir, Institute for Advanced Study; Member, School of
Mathematics
Time/Room: 4:30pm - 4:45pm/S-101
Tuesday, October 1
Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar II
Topic: Small set expander flows
Speaker: Ali Kemal Sinop, Institute for Advanced Study; Member, School
of Mathematics
Time/Room: 10:30am - 12:30pm/S-101
Abstract: See below
Short talks by postdoctoral members
Topic: On Rearrangements of Fourier Series
Speaker: Mark Lewko, University of California, Los Angeles; Member,
School of Mathematics
Time/Room: 2:00pm - 2:15pm/S-101
Topic: Log-integrability of Rademacher Fourier series, with
applications to random analytic functions
Speaker: Alon Nishry, Tel Aviv University; Member, School of Mathematics
Time/Room: 2:15pm - 2:30pm/S-101
Topic: High Dimensional Expanders
Speaker: Ori Parzanchevski, Hebrew University of Jerusalem; Member,
School of Mathematics
Time/Room: 2:30pm - 2:45pm/S-101
Topic: Fundamental groups of singular varieties
Speaker: Bhargav Bhatt, Institute for Advanced Study; Member, School of
Mathematics
Time/Room: 2:45pm - 3:00pm/S-101
Topic: Diffusion in high Sobolev spaces for Hamiltonian PDEs
Speaker: Oana Pocovnicu, Princeton University; Member, School of
Mathematics
Time/Room: 4:00pm - 4:15pm/S-101
Topic: Value distribution of long Dirichlet polynomials and
applications to the Riemann zeta-function
Speaker: Maksym Radziwill, Stanford University; Member, School of
Mathematics
Time/Room: 4:15pm - 4:30pm/S-101
Topic: Continued fractions in general relativity
Speaker: Michael Reiterer, ETH Zurich; Member, School of Mathematics
Time/Room: 4:30pm - 4:45pm/S-101
Wednesday, October 2
Non-equilibrium Dynamics and Random Matrices
Topic: Introduction to KPZ
Speaker: Jeremy Quastel, University of Toronto; Member, School of
Mathematics
Time/Room: 11:00am - 12:00pm/S-101
Abstract: See below
Workshop on Topology: Identifying Order in Complex Systems
Topic: Tracing medieval Migration through Next Generation
Sequencing: Finding Meaningful Models in a Sea of Data
Speaker: Patrick J. Geary, Institute for Advanced Study; Faculty,
School of Historical Studies
Time/Room: 2:00pm - 3:00pm/S-101
IAS/Princeton University Wednesday Seminar on Perfectoid Spaces
Speaker: To Be Announced
Time/Room: 2:00pm - 4:00pm/Fine 322, Princeton University
Workshop on Topology: Identifying Order in Complex Systems
Topic: The Topology of Viral Evolution
Speaker: Raúl Rabadán, Columbia University
Time/Room: 3:30pm - 4:30pm/S-101
Mathematical Conversations
Speaker: To Be Announced
Time/Room: 6:00pm - 7:30pm/Dilworth Room
Thursday, October 3
Non-equilibrium Dynamics and Random Matrices
Topic: Disorder-generated multifractals and random matrices:
freezing phenomena and extremes
Speaker: Yan Fyodorov, Queen Mary University of London
Time/Room: 11:00am - 12:00pm/S-101
Abstract: See below
Working Group on Algebraic Number Theory
Speaker: To Be Announced
Time/Room: 2:00pm - 4:00pm/Fine 214, Princeton University
Non-equilibrium Dynamics and Random Matrices
Topic: Introduction to KPZ II
Informal seminar
Speaker: Jeremy Quastel, University of Toronto; Member, School of
Mathematics
Time/Room: 4:00pm - 5:00pm/S-101
Abstract: See below
Joint IAS/Princeton University Number Theory Seminar
Topic: Pairs of \(p\)-adic \(L\)-functions for elliptic curves at
supersingular primes
Speaker: Florian Sprung, Princeton University; Member, School of
Mathematics
Time/Room: 4:30pm - 5:30pm/Fine 214, Princeton University
Abstract: See below
Friday, October 4
Princeton/IAS Symplectic Geometry Seminar
Topic: Positive loops and orderability in contact geometry
Speaker: Peter Weigel, Purdue University
Time/Room: 1:00pm - 2:00pm/S-101
Abstract: See below
Short talks by postdoctoral members
Topic: Homotopy Type Theory: what can logic do for homotopy theory?
Speaker: Peter Lumsdaine, Institute for Advanced Study; Member, School
of Mathematics
Time/Room: 2:00pm - 2:15pm/S-101
Topic: Exponential-time algorithms for NP problems: prospects and
limits
Speaker: Andrew Drucker, Institute for Advanced Study; Member, School
of Mathematics
Time/Room: 2:15pm - 2:30pm/S-101
Topic: Computational aspects of the Combinatorial Nullstellensatz
method via a polynomial approach to matrix and hypermatrix algebra
Speaker: Edinah Gnang, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey;
Member, School of Mathematics
Time/Room: 2:30pm - 2:45pm/S-101
Topic: Approximability of graph partitioning problems
Speaker: Ali Sinop, Institute for Advanced Study; Member, School of
Mathematics
Time/Room: 2:45pm - 3:00pm/S-101
Topic: p-adic versions of BSD
Speaker: Florian Sprung, Brown University; Member, School of Mathematics
Time/Room: 4:00pm - 4:15pm/S-101
Topic: Determining algebraic subgroups from invariant dimensions
Speaker: Jun Yu, Institute for Advanced Study; Member, School of
Mathematics
Time/Room: 4:15pm - 4:30pm/S-101
Topic: Scissors Congruence and K-theory
Speaker: Inna Zakharevich, Massachusetts Institute of Technology;
Member, School of Mathematics
Time/Room: 4:30pm - 4:45pm/S-101
1 Some provable bounds for deep learning
Sanjeev Arora
Deep learning, a modern version of neural nets, is increasingly seen as a
promising way to implement AI tasks such as speech recognition and image
recognition. Most current algorithms are heuristic and have no provable
guarantees. This talk will describe provable learning of an interesting
class of deep networks which are neural nets. Here a deep net is viewed as
a generative model for a probability distribution on inputs, using the
"denoising autoencoder" framework of Vincent et al. The talk will be
self-contained. (Joint work with Aditya Bhaskara, Rong Ge, Tengyu Ma)
2 Small set expander flows
Ali Kemal Sinop
A common way for lower bounding the expansion of a graph is by looking the
second smallest eigenvalue of its Laplacian matrix. Also known as the easy
direction of Cheeger's inequality, this bound becomes too weak when the
expansion is \(o(1)\). In 2004, Arora, Rao and Vazirani proved the
existence of "expander flows", which are certificates of graph expansion up
to a factor of \(O(\sqrt{\log n})\). In this talk, I will describe a
generalization of these for small set, "small set expander (SSE) flows",
and I will describe an application of such flows for finding near optimal
sparse cuts on graphs with certain isoperimetric profiles. This is joint
work with Sanjeev Arora and Rong Ge.
3 Introduction to KPZ
Jeremy Quastel
This will be a background talk on the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation and its
universality class.
4 Disorder-generated multifractals and random matrices: freezing phenomena
and extremes
Yan Fyodorov
I will start with discussing the relation between a class of
disorder-generated multifractals and logarithmically-correlated random
fields and processes. An important example of the latter is provided by the
so-called "\(1/f\) noise" which, in particular, emerges naturally in
studies of characteristic polynomials of CUE matrices. Extending the
consideration to GUE setting reveals more processes of that type, in
particular a special singular limit of the Fractional Brownian Motion. In
the rest of the talk I will attempt to show how to use heuristic insights
from Statistical Mechanics of disordered systems to arrive to detailed
conjectures about distributions of high and extreme values of
logarithmically correlated processes and multifractals, including the
absolute maximum of the Riemann zeta-function in intervals of the critical
line.
5 Introduction to KPZ II
Jeremy Quastel
This will be a background talk on the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation and its
universality class.
6 Pairs of \(p\)-adic \(L\)-functions for elliptic curves at supersingular
primes
Florian Sprung
Iwasawa Theory for elliptic curves/modular forms has been traditionally in
better shape at ordinary primes than at supersingular ones. After sketching
the ordinary theory, we will indicate what makes the supersingular case
more complicated, and then introduce *pairs* of objects that that are as
simple as their ordinary counterparts. These pairs of objects work in
tandem to shed some light on the nature of ranks of elliptic curves and the
size of Sha along cyclotomic \(\mathbb Z_p\) extensions.
7 Positive loops and orderability in contact geometry
Peter Weigel
Orderability of contact manifolds is related in some non-obvious ways to
the topology of a contact manifold \(\Sigma\). We know, for instance, that
if (\Sigma\) admits a 2-subcritical Stein filling, it must be
non-orderable. By way of contrast, in this talk I will discuss ways of
modifying Liouville structures for high-dimensional \(\Sigma\) so that the
result is always orderable. The main technical tool is a Morse-Bott Floer
theoretic growth rate, which has some parallels with Givental's nonlinear
Maslov index. I will also discuss a generalization to the relative case,
and applications to bi-invariant metrics on \(\mathrm{Cont}(\Sigma)\).
IAS Math Seminars Home Page:
http://www.math.ias.edu/seminars
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