- Series
- Graph Theory Seminar
- Time
- Monday, November 23, 2015 - 3:05pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 005
- Speaker
- Krzysztof Choromanski – Google Research
- Organizer
- Robin Thomas
The goal of this talk is to show recent advances regarding two important
mathematical problems. The first one can be straightforwardly formulated in
a graph theory language, but can be possibly applied in other fields. The
second one was motivated by machine learning applications, but leads to
graph theory techniques.
The celebrated open conjecture of Erdos and Hajnal from 1989 states
that families of graphs not having some given graph H as an induced
subgraph contain polynomial-size cliques/stable sets (in the undirected
setting) or transitive subsets (in the directed setting). Recent techniques
developed over last few years provided the proof of the conjecture for new
infinite classes of graphs (in particular the first infinite class of prime
graphs). Furthermore, they gave tight asymptotics for the Erdos-Hajnal
coefficients for many classes of prime tournaments as well as the proof of
the conjecture for all but one tournament on at most six vertices and the
proof of the weaker version of the conjecture for trees on at most six
vertices. In this part of the talk I will summarize these recent
achievements.
Structured non-linear graph-based hashing is motivated by applications in
neural networks, where matrices of linear projections are constrained to
have a specific structured form. This drastically reduces the size of the
model and speeds up computations. I will show how the properties of the
underlying graph encoding correlations between entries of these matrices
(such as its chromatic number) imply the quality of the entire non-linear
hashing mechanism. Furthermore, I will explain how general structured
matrices that very recently attracted researchers’ attention naturally lead
to the underlying graph theory description.