2011-2012 Seminars

Nov
07
2011

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar I

How Bad is Forming Your Own Opinion
Sigal Oren
11:15am|S-101

A long-standing line of work in economic theory has studied models by which a group of people in a social network, each holding a numerical opinion, can arrive at a shared opinion through repeated averaging with their neighbors in the network...

Oct
31
2011

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar I

Mantel's Theorem for Random Graphs
Jeff Kahn
11:15am|S-101

For a graph $G$, let $t(G)$ (resp. $b(G)$) denote the maximum size of a triangle-free (resp. bipartite) subgraph of $G$. Of course $t(G) \geq b(G)$ for any $G$, and a classic result of Mantel from 1907 (the first case of Turan’s Theorem) says $t(K_n...

Oct
18
2011

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar II

Rigidity of 3-Colorings of the d-Dimensional Discrete Torus
Ohad Feldheim
10:30am|S-101

We prove that a uniformly chosen proper coloring of Z_{2n}^d with 3 colors has a very rigid structure when the dimension d is sufficiently high. The coloring takes one color on almost all of either the even or the odd sub-lattice. In particular, one...

Oct
17
2011

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar I

On the Number of Hamilton Cycles in Psdueo-Random Graphs
11:15am|S-101

A pseudo-random graph is a graph G resembling a typical random graph of the same edge density. Pseudo-random graphs are expected naturally to share many properties of their random counterparts. In particular, many of their enumerative properties...

Oct
11
2011

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar II

Limit Theories and Higher Order Fourier Analysis
10:30am|S-101

We present a unified approach to various topics in mathematics including: Ergodic theory, graph limit theory, hypergraph regularity, and Higher order Fourier analysis. The main theme is that very large complicated structures can be treated as...

Oct
10
2011

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar I

A Little Advice Can Be Very Helpful
11:15am|S-101

Proving superpolylogarithmic lower bounds for dynamic data structures has remained an open problem despite years of research. Recently, Patrascu proposed an exciting new approach for breaking this barrier via a two player communication model in...

Oct
04
2011

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar II

Limit Theories and Higher Order Fourier Analysis
10:30am|S-101

We present a unified approach to various topics in mathematics including: Ergodic theory, graph limit theory, hypergraph regularity, and Higher order Fourier analysis. The main theme is that very large complicated structures can be treated as...