Past Probability Seminars Spring 2020
Spring 2015
Thursdays in 901 Van Vleck Hall at 2:25 PM, unless otherwise noted.
If you would like to sign up for the email list to receive seminar announcements then please send an email to join-probsem@lists.wisc.edu.
Thursday, January 15, Miklos Racz, UC-Berkeley Stats
Title: Testing for high-dimensional geometry in random graphs
Abstract: I will talk about a random geometric graph model, where connections between vertices depend on distances between latent d-dimensional labels; we are particularly interested in the high-dimensional case when d is large. Upon observing a graph, we want to tell if it was generated from this geometric model, or from an Erdos-Renyi random graph. We show that there exists a computationally efficient procedure to do this which is almost optimal (in an information-theoretic sense). The key insight is based on a new statistic which we call "signed triangles". To prove optimality we use a bound on the total variation distance between Wishart matrices and the Gaussian Orthogonal Ensemble. This is joint work with Sebastien Bubeck, Jian Ding, and Ronen Eldan.
Thursday, January 22, No Seminar
Thursday, January 29, Arnab Sen, University of Minnesota
Title: Double Roots of Random Littlewood Polynomials
Abstract: We consider random polynomials whose coefficients are independent and uniform on {-1,1}. We will show that the probability that such a polynomial of degree n has a double root is o(n^{-2}) when n+1 is not divisible by 4 and is of the order n^{-2} otherwise. We will also discuss extensions to random polynomials with more general coefficient distributions.
This is joint work with Ron Peled and Ofer Zeitouni.
Thursday, February 5, No seminar this week
Thursday, February 12, No Seminar this week
Thursday, February 19, Xiaoqin Guo, Purdue
Title: Quenched invariance principle for random walks in time-dependent random environment
Abstract: In this talk we discuss random walks in a time-dependent zero-drift random environment in [math]\displaystyle{ Z^d }[/math]. We prove a quenched invariance principle under an appropriate moment condition. The proof is based on the use of a maximum principle for parabolic difference operators. This is a joint work with Jean-Dominique Deuschel and Alejandro Ramirez.
Thursday, February 26, Dan Crisan, Imperial College London
Title: Smoothness properties of randomly perturbed semigroups with application to nonlinear filtering
Abstract: In this talk I will discuss sharp gradient bounds for perturbed diffusion semigroups. In contrast with existing results, the perturbation is here random and the bounds obtained are pathwise. Our approach builds on the classical work of Kusuoka and Stroock and extends their program developed for the heat semi-group to solutions of stochastic partial differential equations. The work is motivated by and applied to nonlinear filtering. The analysis allows us to derive pathwise gradient bounds for the un-normalised conditional distribution of a partially observed signal. The estimates we derive have sharp small time asymptotics
This is joint work with Terry Lyons (Oxford) and Christian Literrer (Ecole Polytechnique) and is based on the paper
D Crisan, C Litterer, T Lyons, Kusuoka–Stroock gradient bounds for the solution of the filtering equation, Journal of Functional Analysis, 2105
Thursday, March 5, TBA
Title: TBA
Abstract:
Wednesday, March 11, Sam Stechmann, UW-Madison, 2:25pm Van Vleck B321
Please note the unusual time and room.
Title: Stochastic Models for Rainfall: Extreme Events and Critical Phenomena
Abstract:
In recent years, tropical rainfall statistics have been shown to conform to paradigms of critical phenomena and statistical physics. In this talk, stochastic models will be presented as prototypes for understanding the atmospheric dynamics that leads to these statistics and extreme events. Key nonlinear ingredients in the models include either stochastic jump processes or thresholds (Heaviside functions). First, both exact solutions and simple numerics are used to verify that a suite of observed rainfall statistics is reproduced by the models, including power-law distributions and long-range correlations. Second, we prove that a stochastic trigger, which is a time-evolving indicator of whether it is raining or not, will converge to a deterministic threshold in an appropriate limit. Finally, we discuss the connections among these rainfall models, stochastic PDEs, and traditional models for critical phenomena.
Thursday, March 19, Mark Huber, Claremont McKenna Math
Title: Understanding relative error in Monte Carlo simulations
Abstract: The problem of estimating the probability [math]\displaystyle{ p }[/math] of heads on an unfair coin has been around for centuries, and has inspired numerous advances in probability such as the Strong Law of Large Numbers and the Central Limit Theorem. In this talk, I'll consider a new twist: given an estimate [math]\displaystyle{ \hat p }[/math], suppose we want to understand the behavior of the relative error [math]\displaystyle{ (\hat p - p)/p }[/math]. In classic estimators, the values that the relative error can take on depends on the value of [math]\displaystyle{ p }[/math]. I will present a new estimate with the remarkable property that the distribution of the relative error does not depend in any way on the value of [math]\displaystyle{ p }[/math]. Moreover, this new estimate is very fast: it takes a number of coin flips that is very close to the theoretical minimum. Time permitting, I will also discuss new ways to use concentration results for estimating the mean of random variables where normal approximations do not apply.
Thursday, March 26, Ji Oon Lee, KAIST
Title: TBA
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Thursday, April 2, No Seminar, Spring Break
Thursday, April 9, Elnur Emrah, UW-Madison
Title: TBA
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Thursday, April 16, TBA
Title: TBA
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Thursday, April 23, Hoi Nguyen, Ohio State University
Title: TBA
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Thursday, April 30, TBA
Title: TBA
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Thursday, May 7, TBA
Title: TBA
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