Seminars and Colloquia by Series

The Mathematics of Criminal Behavior: Modeling and Experiments

Series
Job Candidate Talk
Time
Thursday, November 29, 2012 - 11:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Martin ShortUCLA
In this era of "big data", Mathematics as it applies to human behavior is becoming a much more relevant and penetrable topic of research. This holds true even for some of the less desirable forms of human behavior, such as crime. In this talk, I will discuss the mathematical modeling of crime on various "scales" and using many different mathematical techniques, as well as the results of experiments that are being performed to test the usefulness and accuracy of these models. This will include: models of crime hotspots at the scale of neighborhoods -- in the form of systems of PDEs and also statistical models adapted from literature on earthquake predictions -- along with the results of the model's application within the LAPD; a model for gang retaliatory violence on the scale of social networks, and its use in the solution of an inverse problem to help solve gang crimes; and a game-theoretic model of crime and punishment at the scale of a society, with comparisons of the model to results of lab-based economic experiments performed by myself and collaborators.

Regularity and stochastic homogenization of fully nonlinear equations without uniform ellipticity.

Series
Job Candidate Talk
Time
Tuesday, November 20, 2012 - 11:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Charles SmartMIT
I will discuss regularity of fully nonlinear elliptic equations when the usual uniform upper bound on the ellipticity is replaced by bound on its $L^d$ norm, where $d$ is the dimension of the ambient space. Our estimates refine the classical theory and require several new ideas that we believe are of independent interest. As an application, we prove homogenization for a class of stationary ergodic strictly elliptic equations.

A new twist on the Carleson operator

Series
Job Candidate Talk
Time
Thursday, November 15, 2012 - 16:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 005
Speaker
Lillian PierceUniversity of Oxford
Must the Fourier series of an L^2 function converge pointwise almost everywhere? In the 1960's, Carleson answered this question in the affirmative, by studying a particular type of maximal singular integral operator, which has since become known as the Carleson operator. In the past 40 years, a number of important results have been proved for generalizations of the original Carleson operator. In this talk we will describe new joint work with Po Lam Yung that introduces curved structure to the setting of Carleson operators.

Adaptation in Irregular Regression Models

Series
Job Candidate Talk
Time
Tuesday, January 31, 2012 - 11:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Michael ChichignoudETH Zurich
We study the nonparametric regression model (X1 , Y1 ), ...(Xn , Yn ) , where (Xi )i≥1 is the deterministic design and (Yi )i≥1 is a sequence of real random variables. Assume that the density of Yi is known and can be written as g (., f (Xi )) , which depends on a regression function f at the point Xi . The function f is assumed smooth, i.e. belonging to a Hoelder ball or a Nikol’ski ball. The aim is to estimate the regression function from the observations for two error risks (pointwise and global estimations) and to find the optimal estimator (in the sense of rates of convergence) for each density g . We are particularly interested in the study of irregular models, i.e. when the Fisher information does not exist (for example, when the density g is discontinuous like the uniform density). In this case, the rate of convergence can be improved with the use of nolinear estimators like Maximum likelihood or bayesian estimators. We use the locally parametric approach to construct a new local version of bayesian estimators. Under some conditions on the likelihood of the model, we propose an adaptive procedure based on the so-called Lepski’s method (adaptive selection of the bandwidth) which allows us to construct an optimal adaptive bayesian estimator. We apply this theory to several models like multiplicative uniform model, shifted exponential model, alpha model, inhomogeous Poisson model and Gaussian model

Recent advances on the structure of metric measure spaces with Ricci curvature bounded from below

Series
Job Candidate Talk
Time
Thursday, January 19, 2012 - 16:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 005
Speaker
Nicola GigliUniversity of Nice
I'll show how on metric measure spaces with Ricci curvature bounded from below in the sense of Lott-Sturm-Villani there is a well defined notion of Heat flow, and how the study of the properties of this flow leads to interesting geometric and analytic properties of the spaces themselves. A particular attention will be given to the class of spaces where the Heat flow is linear. (From a collaboration with Ambrosio and Savare')

Coupling and Upscaling of Particle Models in Multiscale Physics

Series
Job Candidate Talk
Time
Tuesday, January 17, 2012 - 11:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Matthew DobsonNSF Postdoctoral Fellow, Ecole des Ponts ParisTech
Multiscale numerical methods seek to compute approximate solutions to physical problems at a reduced computational cost compared to direct numerical simulations. This talk will cover two methods which have a fine scale atomistic model that couples to a coarse scale continuum approximation. The quasicontinuum method directly couples a continuum approximation to an atomistic model to create a coherent model for computing deformed configurations of crystalline lattices at zero temperature. The details of the interface between these two models greatly affects the model properties, and we will discuss the interface consistency, material stability, and error for energy-based and force-based quasicontinuum variants along with the implications for algorithm selection. In the case of crystalline lattices at zero temperature, the constitutive law between stress and strain is computed using the Cauchy-Born rule (the lattice deformation is locally linear and equal to the gradient). For the case of complex fluids, computing the stress-strain relation using a molecular model is more challenging since imposing a strain requires forcing the fluid out of equilibrium, the subject of nonequilibrium molecular dynamics. I will describe the derivation of a stochastic model for the simulation of a molecular system at a given strain rate and temperature.

Counting closed loops in a stratum of quadratic differentials

Series
Job Candidate Talk
Time
Thursday, January 12, 2012 - 11:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Kasra RafiUniversity of Oklohama
In his thesis, Margulis computed the asymptotic growth rate for the number of closed geodesics of length less than R on a given closed hyperbolic surface and his argument has been emulated to many other settings. We examine the Teichmüller geodesic flow on the moduli space of a surface, or more generally any stratum of quadratic differentials in the cotangent bundle of moduli space. The flow is known to be mixing, but the spaces are not compact and the flow is not uniformly hyperbolic. We show that the random walk associated to the Teichmüller geodesic flow is biased toward the compact part of the stratum. We then use this to find asymptotic growth rate of for the number of closed loops in the stratum. (This is a joint work with Alex Eskin and Maryam Mirzakhani.)

Identifiability and estimation of multiple transmission pathways in waterborne disease

Series
Job Candidate Talk
Time
Tuesday, January 10, 2012 - 11:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Marisa EisenbergMBI, Ohio State
Waterborne diseases cause over 3.5 million deaths annually, with cholera alone responsible for 3-5 million cases/year and over 100,000 deaths/year. Many waterborne diseases exhibit multiple characteristic timescales or pathways of infection, which can be modeled as direct and indirect transmission. A major public health issue for waterborne diseases involves understanding the modes of transmission in order to improve control and prevention strategies. One question of interest is: given data for an outbreak, can we determine the role and relative importance of direct vs. environmental/waterborne routes of transmission? We examine these issues by exploring the identifiability and parameter estimation of a differential equation model of waterborne disease transmission dynamics. We use a novel differential algebra approach together with several numerical approaches to examine the theoretical and practical identifiability of a waterborne disease model and establish if it is possible to determine the transmission rates from outbreak case data (i.e. whether the transmission rates are identifiable). Our results show that both direct and environmental transmission routes are identifiable, though they become practically unidentifiable with fast water dynamics. Adding measurements of pathogen shedding or water concentration can improve identifiability and allow more accurate estimation of waterborne transmission parameters, as well as the basic reproduction number. Parameter estimation for a recent outbreak in Angola suggests that both transmission routes are needed to explain the observed cholera dynamics. I will also discuss some ongoing applications to the current cholera outbreak in Haiti.

Massey products in Galois cohomology via rational points

Series
Job Candidate Talk
Time
Thursday, December 8, 2011 - 11:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Kirsten WickelgrenAIM/Harvard University
The cohomology ring of the absolute Galois group Gal(kbar/k) of a field k controls interesting arithmetic properties of k. The Milnor conjecture, proven by Voevodsky, identifies the cohomology ring H^*(Gal(kbar/k), Z/2) with the tensor algebra of k* mod the ideal generated by x otimes 1-x for x in k - {0,1} mod 2, and the Bloch-Kato theorem, also proven by Voevodsky, generalizes the coefficient ring Z/2. In particular, the cohomology ring of Gal(kbar/k) can be expressed in terms of addition and multiplication in the field k, despite the fact that it is difficult even to list specific elements of Gal(kbar/k). The cohomology ring is a coarser invariant than the differential graded algebra of cochains, and one can ask for an analogous description of this finer invariant, controlled by and controlling higher order cohomology operations. We show that order n Massey products of n-1 factors of x and one factor of 1-x vanish, generalizing the relation x otimes 1-x. This is done by embedding P^1 - {0,1,infinity} into its Picard variety and constructing Gal(kbar/k) equivariant maps from pi_1^et applied to this embedding to unipotent matrix groups. This also identifies Massey products of the form <1-x, x, … , x , 1-x> with f cup 1-x, where f is a certain cohomology class which arises in the description of the action of Gal(kbar/k) on pi_1^et(P^1 - {0,1,infinity}). The first part of this talk will not assume knowledge of Galois cohomology or Massey products.

Bernstein's theorem, Newton polygons, and tropical intersections

Series
Job Candidate Talk
Time
Tuesday, December 6, 2011 - 11:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Joseph Rabinoff Harvard University
Bernstein's theorem is a classical result which computes the number of common zeros in (C*)^n of a generic set of n Laurent polynomials in n variables. The theorem of the Newton polygon is a ubiquitous tool in arithmetic geometry which calculates the valuations of the zeros of a polynomial (or convergent power series) over a non-Archimedean field, along with the number of zeros (counted with multiplicity) with each given valuation. We will explain in what sense both theorems are very special cases of a lifting theorem in tropical intersection theory. The proof of this lifting theorem builds on results of Osserman and Payne, and uses Berkovich analytic spaces and extended tropicalizations of toric varieties in a crucial way, as well as Raynaud's theory of formal models of analytic spaces. Most of this talk will be about joint work with Brian Osserman.

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