Events of the Week

Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
November 3
no events
November 4
Graduate Student Colloquium

Counting Lozenge Tilings on a Hexagonal Domain

Lasitha Senarathna - Tulane University
Dinwiddie Hall 102 3:30 PM
In this talk, we consider hexagonal domains on a triangular grid and use a method known as Kasteleyn theory (KTF method) to count the number of lozenge tilings of these domains. We will provide a proof of this enumeration result. Exact counts of tilings leads us to study the typical behavior of a uniformly random tiling in large domains, including the emergence of limit shapes such as frozen and liquid regions separated by an Arctic curve.
November 5
Probability & Statistics

The Systematic Manipulation of the Scientific Publication and Citation Processes

Bill Woodall - Professor Emeritus, Virginia Tech
Host: Xiang Ji
Dinwiddie Hall 108 3:00 PM
I became aware of the extent of the attacks on the publication and citation processes though Taylor & Francis, the publisher of Quality Engineering for which I am the editor.

All areas of science are being affected, from mathematics to medicine. The following are some of the primary concerns: authorships being sold, fake papers produced by paper mills, sham reviews, unethical behavior of guest editors for special issues, bribes offered to editors, the rise of predatory journals and conferences, citation cartels, plagiarism, misuse of AI, and the fabrication of data and images.

These and other issues, illustrated with numerous examples, will be discussed in this presentation. A related issue is the proliferation of junk science.

Efforts to protect the scientific literature will be discussed, such as the contributions by individual sleuths and the use of the STM Integrity Hub that was established by the major academic publishers. There will also be some discussion of the article retraction process. Over 10,000 scientific papers were retracted in 2023, a record number.

Algebra and Combinatorics

On the epsilon multiplicity and its density function

Suprajo Das - IIT Madras
Host: Tai Ha
Richardson Building, 108 3:00 PM
Let $(R, \mathfrak{m})$ be a Noetherian local ring of dimension $d$, and let $I\subseteq R$ be an ideal. Ulrich and Validashti defined the \emph{$\varepsilon$-multiplicity} of $I$ as
\[
\varepsilon(I) = \limsup_{n \to \infty}
\frac{\lambda_R\!\left(H^0_{\mathfrak{m}}(R/I^n)\right)}{n^d / d!}.
\]
This invariant may be viewed as a generalization of the classical Hilbert-Samuel multiplicity. Cutkosky showed that the $\limsup$ in this definition can be replaced by an actual limit when $R$ is analytically unramified. A surprising example due to Cutkosky, Hà, Srinivasan, and Theodorescu demonstrates
that this limit can be an irrational number even when $R$ is a regular local ring.

In this talk, we shall focus on the case of homogeneous ideals in a standard graded domain over a field. Motivated by Trivedi's approach to the Hilbert-Kunz multiplicity via density functions, we introduce a compactly supported continuous real-valued function, called the \emph{$\varepsilon$-density function}, whose integral recovers the $\varepsilon$-multiplicity. If time permits, we will present explicit examples and discuss applications in the context of integral closures.

This talk is based on joint work with Roy and Trivedi.
November 6
no events
November 7
Applied and Computational Mathematics

Metric entropy and nonlinear PDEs

Prerona Dutta - Xavier University
Host: Katerina
Gibson Hall 126A 3:00 PM
Inspired by a question posed by Lax in 2002, the study of metric entropy for nonlinear partial differential equations has received increasing attention in recent years. This talk demonstrates methods to obtain sharp upper and lower bounds on the metric entropy for a class of real-valued bounded total variation functions and then for a class of bounded total generalized variation functions taking values in a general totally bounded metric space. Thereafter we use each of these results to establish metric entropy estimates for the set of viscosity solutions to Hamilton-Jacobi equations with a uniformly directionally convex Hamiltonian and the set of entropy admissible weak solutions to scalar conservation laws with a weakly genuinely nonlinear flux, respectively. Estimates of this type could provide a measure of the order of resolution and complexity of a numerical method required to solve the corresponding equation.
November 3 - November 7
November 3
Monday
no events
November 4
Tuesday
Graduate Student Colloquium

Counting Lozenge Tilings on a Hexagonal Domain

Lasitha Senarathna - Tulane University
Dinwiddie Hall 102 3:30 PM
In this talk, we consider hexagonal domains on a triangular grid and use a method known as Kasteleyn theory (KTF method) to count the number of lozenge tilings of these domains. We will provide a proof of this enumeration result. Exact counts of tilings leads us to study the typical behavior of a uniformly random tiling in large domains, including the emergence of limit shapes such as frozen and liquid regions separated by an Arctic curve.
November 5
Wednesday
Probability & Statistics

The Systematic Manipulation of the Scientific Publication and Citation Processes

Bill Woodall - Professor Emeritus, Virginia Tech
Host: Xiang Ji
Dinwiddie Hall 108 3:00 PM
I became aware of the extent of the attacks on the publication and citation processes though Taylor & Francis, the publisher of Quality Engineering for which I am the editor.

All areas of science are being affected, from mathematics to medicine. The following are some of the primary concerns: authorships being sold, fake papers produced by paper mills, sham reviews, unethical behavior of guest editors for special issues, bribes offered to editors, the rise of predatory journals and conferences, citation cartels, plagiarism, misuse of AI, and the fabrication of data and images.

These and other issues, illustrated with numerous examples, will be discussed in this presentation. A related issue is the proliferation of junk science.

Efforts to protect the scientific literature will be discussed, such as the contributions by individual sleuths and the use of the STM Integrity Hub that was established by the major academic publishers. There will also be some discussion of the article retraction process. Over 10,000 scientific papers were retracted in 2023, a record number.

Algebra and Combinatorics

On the epsilon multiplicity and its density function

Suprajo Das - IIT Madras
Host: Tai Ha
Richardson Building, 108 3:00 PM
Let $(R, \mathfrak{m})$ be a Noetherian local ring of dimension $d$, and let $I\subseteq R$ be an ideal. Ulrich and Validashti defined the \emph{$\varepsilon$-multiplicity} of $I$ as
\[
\varepsilon(I) = \limsup_{n \to \infty}
\frac{\lambda_R\!\left(H^0_{\mathfrak{m}}(R/I^n)\right)}{n^d / d!}.
\]
This invariant may be viewed as a generalization of the classical Hilbert-Samuel multiplicity. Cutkosky showed that the $\limsup$ in this definition can be replaced by an actual limit when $R$ is analytically unramified. A surprising example due to Cutkosky, Hà, Srinivasan, and Theodorescu demonstrates
that this limit can be an irrational number even when $R$ is a regular local ring.

In this talk, we shall focus on the case of homogeneous ideals in a standard graded domain over a field. Motivated by Trivedi's approach to the Hilbert-Kunz multiplicity via density functions, we introduce a compactly supported continuous real-valued function, called the \emph{$\varepsilon$-density function}, whose integral recovers the $\varepsilon$-multiplicity. If time permits, we will present explicit examples and discuss applications in the context of integral closures.

This talk is based on joint work with Roy and Trivedi.
November 6
Thursday
no events
November 7
Friday
Applied and Computational Mathematics

Metric entropy and nonlinear PDEs

Prerona Dutta - Xavier University
Host: Katerina
Gibson Hall 126A 3:00 PM
Inspired by a question posed by Lax in 2002, the study of metric entropy for nonlinear partial differential equations has received increasing attention in recent years. This talk demonstrates methods to obtain sharp upper and lower bounds on the metric entropy for a class of real-valued bounded total variation functions and then for a class of bounded total generalized variation functions taking values in a general totally bounded metric space. Thereafter we use each of these results to establish metric entropy estimates for the set of viscosity solutions to Hamilton-Jacobi equations with a uniformly directionally convex Hamiltonian and the set of entropy admissible weak solutions to scalar conservation laws with a weakly genuinely nonlinear flux, respectively. Estimates of this type could provide a measure of the order of resolution and complexity of a numerical method required to solve the corresponding equation.
November 10
no events
November 11
Graduate Student Colloquium

TBA

Dipendranath Mahato
TBA 3:30 PM
TBA
November 12
Algebra and Combinatorics

Groupoids of Configurations of Lines

Jake Kettinger - Colorado State University
Richardson Building, 108 3:00 PM
In recent years, algebraic geometers began exploring a fascinating phenomenon exhibited by configurations of points in projective space wherein their general projection into a hyperplane is a complete intersection. This phenomenon was called the "geproci" property. In an effort to investigate this geproci property, Brian Harbourne and Allison Ganger began to look at special groups induced by configurations of lines known as groups of groupoids. In this talk, we will give some background on the geproci property and how it relates to configurations of lines known as spreads and maximal partial spreads. We will then define the groupoid induced by a configuration of lines in P^3 (with lots of Desmos demonstrations!), and look at specific examples of this groupoid.
November 13
Colloquium

Celestial Mechanics meets Tropical Geometry

Anton Leykin - Georgie Tech
Host: Kalina Mincheva and Daniel Bernstein
Gibson Hall 126A 3:30 PM
Given initial positions and velocities of $n$ celestial bodies, with only gravitation force in play, can you describe their trajectories?

This analytic question---the so-called $n$-body problem---prompts another problem: describe configurations of the celestial bodies that are in relative equilibrium, that is, the mutual distances don't change over time. The latter question can be set up purely algebraically, as a system of multivariate polynomial equations depending on masses of the bodies as parameters.

In a joint work with Anders Jensen, we investigate the following conjecture: for fixed $n$, up to natural symmetries, the set of planar relative equilibria for $n$ bodies with positive masses is finite. Although this statement may appear deceptively simple, it is the sixth problem on Smale’s list of problems for the 21st century and is fully resolved only for up to four bodies. We provide a computer-assisted proof for $n=5$ in the case of generic masses. The human component of the argument draws on several elementary ideas from tropical geometry, and our approach places the case $n=6$ within reach.

This talk is aimed at a general mathematical audience, including students. I will give an overview of basic celestial mechanics, basic tropical geometry, and basic rigidity theory. Examples for all of these will be in the plane.
November 14
Applied and Computational Mathematics

TBA

Dana Ferranti - Worcester Polytechnic Institute
TBA 3:00 PM
TBA
November 10 - November 14
November 10
Monday
no events
November 11
Tuesday
Graduate Student Colloquium

TBA

Dipendranath Mahato
TBA 3:30 PM
TBA
November 12
Wednesday
Algebra and Combinatorics

Groupoids of Configurations of Lines

Jake Kettinger - Colorado State University
Richardson Building, 108 3:00 PM
In recent years, algebraic geometers began exploring a fascinating phenomenon exhibited by configurations of points in projective space wherein their general projection into a hyperplane is a complete intersection. This phenomenon was called the "geproci" property. In an effort to investigate this geproci property, Brian Harbourne and Allison Ganger began to look at special groups induced by configurations of lines known as groups of groupoids. In this talk, we will give some background on the geproci property and how it relates to configurations of lines known as spreads and maximal partial spreads. We will then define the groupoid induced by a configuration of lines in P^3 (with lots of Desmos demonstrations!), and look at specific examples of this groupoid.
November 13
Thursday
Colloquium

Celestial Mechanics meets Tropical Geometry

Anton Leykin - Georgie Tech
Host: Kalina Mincheva and Daniel Bernstein
Gibson Hall 126A 3:30 PM
Given initial positions and velocities of $n$ celestial bodies, with only gravitation force in play, can you describe their trajectories?

This analytic question---the so-called $n$-body problem---prompts another problem: describe configurations of the celestial bodies that are in relative equilibrium, that is, the mutual distances don't change over time. The latter question can be set up purely algebraically, as a system of multivariate polynomial equations depending on masses of the bodies as parameters.

In a joint work with Anders Jensen, we investigate the following conjecture: for fixed $n$, up to natural symmetries, the set of planar relative equilibria for $n$ bodies with positive masses is finite. Although this statement may appear deceptively simple, it is the sixth problem on Smale’s list of problems for the 21st century and is fully resolved only for up to four bodies. We provide a computer-assisted proof for $n=5$ in the case of generic masses. The human component of the argument draws on several elementary ideas from tropical geometry, and our approach places the case $n=6$ within reach.

This talk is aimed at a general mathematical audience, including students. I will give an overview of basic celestial mechanics, basic tropical geometry, and basic rigidity theory. Examples for all of these will be in the plane.
November 14
Friday
Applied and Computational Mathematics

TBA

Dana Ferranti - Worcester Polytechnic Institute
TBA 3:00 PM
TBA
November 17
no events
November 18
Graduate Student Colloquium

TBA

Vinh A Pham
TBA 3:30 PM
TBA
November 19
Probability & Statistics

Composite likelihood approaches to phylogenetic inference under the multispecies coalescent

Laura Kubatko - Ohio State University
Host: Xiang Ji
Gibson Hall 400D 2:00 PM
Species-level phylogenetic inference under the multispecies coalescent model remains challenging in the typical inference frameworks (e.g., the likelihood and Bayesian frameworks) due to the dimensionality of the space of both gene trees and species trees. Algebraic approaches intended to establish identifiability of species tree parameters have suggested computationally efficient inference procedures that have been widely used by empiricists and that have good theoretical properties, such as statistical consistency. However, such approaches are less powerful than approaches based on the full likelihood. Methods based on composite likelihood are a compromise between these two approaches that enable computationally efficient inference while maximizing use of the available sequence data. In this talk, I’ll describe the relationship between these two approaches, highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of each and providing directions for future work.
November 20
no events
November 21
no events
November 17 - November 21
November 17
Monday
no events
November 18
Tuesday
Graduate Student Colloquium

TBA

Vinh A Pham
TBA 3:30 PM
TBA
November 19
Wednesday
Probability & Statistics

Composite likelihood approaches to phylogenetic inference under the multispecies coalescent

Laura Kubatko - Ohio State University
Host: Xiang Ji
Gibson Hall 400D 2:00 PM
Species-level phylogenetic inference under the multispecies coalescent model remains challenging in the typical inference frameworks (e.g., the likelihood and Bayesian frameworks) due to the dimensionality of the space of both gene trees and species trees. Algebraic approaches intended to establish identifiability of species tree parameters have suggested computationally efficient inference procedures that have been widely used by empiricists and that have good theoretical properties, such as statistical consistency. However, such approaches are less powerful than approaches based on the full likelihood. Methods based on composite likelihood are a compromise between these two approaches that enable computationally efficient inference while maximizing use of the available sequence data. In this talk, I’ll describe the relationship between these two approaches, highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of each and providing directions for future work.
November 20
Thursday
no events
November 21
Friday
no events
November 24
no events
November 25
no events
November 26
no events
November 27
Holiday

Thanksgiving Day

November 28
Holiday

Friday after Thanksgiving

November 24 - November 28
November 24
Monday
no events
November 25
Tuesday
no events
November 26
Wednesday
no events
November 27
Thursday
Holiday

Thanksgiving Day

November 28
Friday
Holiday

Friday after Thanksgiving

December 1
no events
December 2
no events
December 3
no events
December 4
no events
December 5
Applied and Computational Mathematics

Scalable Multiclass High-Dimensional Linear Discriminant Analysis via the Randomized Kaczmarz Method

Jocelyn Chi - University of Minnesota
Host: Xiang Ji
Gibson Hall 126A 3:00 PM
Fisher's linear discriminant analysis (LDA) is a foundational method of dimension reduction for classification that has been useful in a wide range of applications. The goal is to identify an optimal subspace to project the observations onto that simultaneously maximizes between-group variation while minimizing within-group differences. The solution is straightforward when the number of observations is greater than the number of features but difficulties arise in the high dimensional setting, where there are more features than there are observations. Many works have proposed solutions for the high dimensional setting and frequently involve additional assumptions or tuning parameters. We propose a fast and simple iterative algorithm for high dimensional multiclass LDA on large data that is free from these additional requirements and that comes with some guarantees. We demonstrate our algorithm on real data and highlight some results.
December 1 - December 5
December 1
Monday
no events
December 2
Tuesday
no events
December 3
Wednesday
no events
December 4
Thursday
no events
December 5
Friday
Applied and Computational Mathematics

Scalable Multiclass High-Dimensional Linear Discriminant Analysis via the Randomized Kaczmarz Method

Jocelyn Chi - University of Minnesota
Host: Xiang Ji
Gibson Hall 126A 3:00 PM
Fisher's linear discriminant analysis (LDA) is a foundational method of dimension reduction for classification that has been useful in a wide range of applications. The goal is to identify an optimal subspace to project the observations onto that simultaneously maximizes between-group variation while minimizing within-group differences. The solution is straightforward when the number of observations is greater than the number of features but difficulties arise in the high dimensional setting, where there are more features than there are observations. Many works have proposed solutions for the high dimensional setting and frequently involve additional assumptions or tuning parameters. We propose a fast and simple iterative algorithm for high dimensional multiclass LDA on large data that is free from these additional requirements and that comes with some guarantees. We demonstrate our algorithm on real data and highlight some results.
December 8
no events
December 9
no events
December 10
no events
December 11
no events
December 12
no events
December 8 - December 12
December 8
Monday
no events
December 9
Tuesday
no events
December 10
Wednesday
no events
December 11
Thursday
no events
December 12
Friday
no events
December 15
no events
December 16
no events
December 17
no events
December 18
no events
December 19
no events
December 15 - December 19
December 15
Monday
no events
December 16
Tuesday
no events
December 17
Wednesday
no events
December 18
Thursday
no events
December 19
Friday
no events
December 22
no events
December 23
no events
December 24
Holiday

Christmas Eve

December 25
Holiday

Christmas Day

December 26
no events
December 22 - December 26
December 22
Monday
no events
December 23
Tuesday
no events
December 24
Wednesday
Holiday

Christmas Eve

December 25
Thursday
Holiday

Christmas Day

December 26
Friday
no events
December 29
no events
December 30
no events
December 31
no events
January 1
no events
January 2
no events
December 29 - January 2
December 29
Monday
no events
December 30
Tuesday
no events
December 31
Wednesday
no events
January 1
Thursday
no events
January 2
Friday
no events
January 5
no events
January 6
no events
January 7
no events
January 8
no events
January 9
no events
January 5 - January 9
January 5
Monday
no events
January 6
Tuesday
no events
January 7
Wednesday
no events
January 8
Thursday
no events
January 9
Friday
no events
January 12
no events
January 13
no events
January 14
no events
January 15
no events
January 16
no events
January 12 - January 16
January 12
Monday
no events
January 13
Tuesday
no events
January 14
Wednesday
no events
January 15
Thursday
no events
January 16
Friday
no events
January 19
no events
January 20
no events
January 21
no events
January 22
no events
January 23
no events
January 19 - January 23
January 19
Monday
no events
January 20
Tuesday
no events
January 21
Wednesday
no events
January 22
Thursday
no events
January 23
Friday
no events
January 26
no events
January 27
no events
January 28
no events
January 29
no events
January 30
no events
January 26 - January 30
January 26
Monday
no events
January 27
Tuesday
no events
January 28
Wednesday
no events
January 29
Thursday
no events
January 30
Friday
no events
Tulane Spin