Pseudorandomness in Mathematics and Computer Science Mini-Workshop
Pseudorandomness in Mathematics and Computer Science Mini-Workshop
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
School of Mathematics
Institute for Advanced Study
In math, one often studies random aspects of deterministic systems and structures. In CS, one often tries to efficiently create structures and systems with specific random-like properties. Recent work has shown many connections between these two approaches through the concept of "pseudorandomness".
Lectures by Bourgain, Impagliazzo, Sarnak and Wigderson, which were aimed at nonspecialists, explored some of the facets of pseudorandomness, with particular emphasis on research directions and open problems that connect the different viewpoints of this concept in math and CS.
1:30 - 2:15 Jean Bourgain: Exponential sums, equidistribution and pseudorandomness
Supplemental information: Additive Combinatorics Sum-Product Phenomena
2:15 - 3:00 Russell Impagliazzo: When do sparse sets have dense models?
Lecture notes taken by Arkadev Chattopadhyay
3:00 - 3:30 Coffee/Tea + cookies break
3:30 - 4:15 Peter Sarnak: Substitution sequences at primes
4:15 - 5:00 Avi Wigderson: Randomness extractors
Lecture notes taken by Zeev Dvir
Videos of all lectures are available at https://www.ias.edu/video/pseudo.