- Series
- School of Mathematics Colloquium
- Time
- Thursday, February 4, 2016 - 11:00am for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 006
- Speaker
- Prof. Dr. Adilson E. Motter – Northwestern University – motter@northwestern.edu – http://dyn.phys.northwestern.edu/
- Organizer
- Molei Tao
The recent interest in network modeling has been largely driven by the
prospect that network optimization will help us understand the workings of
evolution in natural systems and the principles of efficient design in
engineered systems. In this presentation, I will reflect on unanticipated
properties observed in three classes of network optimization problems.
First, I will discuss implications of optimization for the metabolic
activity of living cells and its role in giving rise to the recently
discovered phenomenon of synthetic rescues. I will then comment on the
problem of controlling network dynamics and show that theoretical results
on optimizing the number of driver nodes often only offer a conservative
lower bound to the number actually needed in practice. Finally, I will
discuss the sensitive dependence of network dynamics on network structure
that emerges in the optimization of network topology for dynamical
processes governed by eigenvalue spectra, such as synchronization and
consensus processes. It follows that optimization is a double-edged sword
for which desired and adverse effects can be exacerbated in network
systems due to the high dimensionality of their phase spaces.