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Tue, 09. Dec at 11:15
1.023 (BMS Room, ...
Panorama of matrix models and topological recursion II
Abstract. This is crash course which aims at explaning various aspects of: random matrix ensembles and Coulomb gases, loop equations, spectral curves, topological recursion, maps, free probability, how they fit together and pose some open problems.
Tue, 09. Dec at 13:15
Room 3.007, Rudow...
Tue, 09. Dec at 13:15
Humboldt-Universi...
Wed, 10. Dec at 10:00
Weierstrass-Insti...
Penalized MLE in high-dimensional logistic regression
Abstract. This talk focuses on a popular logistic regression model in the case of a large or even infinite parameter dimension, limited sample size, and possible model misspecification. Recent studies highlighted new effects and phenomena appearing in highly or overparametrized regimes; see e.g. Bartlett et al. (2020), Sur and Candès (2019); Candès and Sur (2020), Bach (2024), Montanari et al. (2025), among others. The properties of the random design in high-dimensional regimes give rise to significant challenges for statistical analysis and inference. Existing strategies to mitigate these issues include tailored gradient-based methods with appropriate step-size choices and stopping criteria, as well as alternative regularization techniques for the logistic loss. In line with Cheng and Montanari (2022), this work examines a simple ridge-penalized formulation in possibly infinite-dimensional settings. The central question addressed is how to select the ridge tuning parameter while preserving standard accuracy guarantees and enabling valid inference.
Wed, 10. Dec at 14:15
WIAS, Erhard-Schm...
From regularity theory for elliptic equations to invariance principle for random walks
Abstract
Wed, 10. Dec at 14:30
MA 650
Thu, 11. Dec at 10:00
SR 009, Arnimallee 6
Anomalous diffusions in inhomogeneous media
Thu, 11. Dec at 10:00
SR 009, Arnimallee 6
Anomalous diffusions in inhomogeneous media
Thu, 11. Dec at 14:00
Fri, 12. Dec
A Pre-tty Pre-amble to Pre-Lie Algebras from Combinatorial Species
Abstract. We present an introduction to pre-Lie algebras, an algebraic structure closely related to Lie algebras. From a combinatorial perspective, pre-Lie algebras are connected to the notion of insertion of objects of a given nature into one another. In recent years, pre-Lie algebras have found numerous applications in algebra, combinatorics, quantum field theory, and numerical analysis. To better understand the nature of pre-Lie algebras, we employ the framework of species, a categorification of the concept of generating functions. This perspective allows us to describe, in a combinatorial way, several algebraic properties of pre-Lie algebras. In particular, we present a “pre-Lie-like” notion of symmetric operads, called Nested Pre-Lie operads (NPL for short). After giving several examples of NPL operads, we explain how to construct NPL-algebras, in the same way algebraic structures emerge from operads by considering algebras over operads. To do so, we use a new variant of species based on polynomial functions. This is joint work with Dominique Manchon, Hedi Regeiba, and Imen Rjaiba.
Fri, 12. Dec at 14:15
FU (T9)
The classical coagulation equation: gelation, self-similarity and oscillations
Tue, 16. Dec at 11:15
1.023 (BMS Room, ...
Koszul duality in twisted QFTs
Abstract. This talk gives an introduction to twisting procedures in supersymmetric field theories, with an emphasis on their modern mathematical formulation. We will then review the notion of Koszul duality, explaining how it captures dual descriptions of local operators and boundary conditions in twisted quantum field theories. Finally, we illustrate these ideas in the case of the B-twist of a two-dimensional N=(2,2) theory, where the resulting topological model leads to a familiar differential graded algebra of polyvector fields and its Koszul dual.
Tue, 16. Dec at 11:15
1.023 (BMS Room, ...
Panorama of matrix models and topological recursion III
Abstract. This is crash course which aims at explaning various aspects of: random matrix ensembles and Coulomb gases, loop equations, spectral curves, topological recursion, maps, free probability, how they fit together and pose some open problems.
Wed, 17. Dec at 10:00
Weierstrass-Insti...
Incomplete U-Statistics of Equireplicate Designs: Berry-Esseen Bound and Efficient Construction.
Abstract. U-statistics are a fundamental class of estimators that generalize the sample mean and underpin much of nonparametric statistics. Although extensively studied in both statistics and probability, key challenges remain. These include their inherently high computational cost—addressed partly through incomplete U-statistics—and their non-standard asymptotic behavior in the degenerate case, which typically requires resampling methods for hypothesis testing. This talk presents a novel perspective on U-statistics, grounded in hypergraph theory and combinatorial designs. Our approach bypasses the traditional Hoeffding decomposition, which is the the main analytical tool in this literature but is highly sensitive to degeneracy. By fully characterizing the dependence structure of a U-statistic, we derive a new Berry–Esseen bound that applies to all incomplete U-statistics based on deterministic designs, yielding conditions under which Gaussian limiting distributions can be established even in the degenerate case and when the order diverges. Moreover, we introduce efficient algorithms to construct incomplete U-statistics of equireplicate designs, a subclass of deterministic designs that, in certain cases, enable to achieve minimum variance. To illustrate the power of this novel framework, we apply it to kernel-based testing, focusing on the widely used two-sample Maximum Mean Discrepancy (MMD) test. Our approach leads to a permutation-free variant of the MMD test that delivers substantial computational gains while retaining statistical validity.
Wed, 17. Dec at 14:15
WIAS, Erhard-Schm...
A weak-strong uniqueness principle for the Mullins--Sekerka equation
Abstract
Wed, 17. Dec at 16:00
Wed, 17. Dec at 16:00
Thu, 18. Dec at 15:15
Rudower Chaussee ...
Integer Multiflows and Cut Conditions
Abstract. For directed graphs with arc capacities, Nagamochi and Ibaraki (1989) showed that if the cut condition guarantees the existence of a fractional multiflow, and this implication holds in a certain hereditary way, then the cut condition also guarantees the existence of an integer multiflow. Motivated by our recent results with Mohammed Majthoub Almoghrabi and Philipp Warode on integer and unsplittable multiflows in series-parallel digraphs, we discuss a hierarchy of cut conditions and a somewhat refined version of the Nagamochi-Ibaraki Theorem.
Thu, 18. Dec at 16:15
HU Berlin, Instit...
Thu, 18. Dec at 17:15
HU Berlin, Instit...
Tue, 06. Jan at 11:15
1.023 (BMS Room, ...
Panorama of matrix models and topological recursion III
Abstract. This is crash course which aims at explaning various aspects of: random matrix ensembles and Coulomb gases, loop equations, spectral curves, topological recursion, maps, free probability, how they fit together and pose some open problems.
Wed, 07. Jan at 10:00
Weierstrass-Insti...
Wed, 07. Jan at 13:15
Room: 3.007 John ...
Secant loci of scrolls over curves
Abstract. The secant loci associated to a linear system \(l\) over a curve C parametrise effective divisors which impose fewer conditions than expected on \(l\). For a rank \(r\) bundle \(E\) and a space of global sections of \(E\), we define and investigate generalised secant loci, which are determinantal loci on Quot schemes of torsion quotients of \(E\). We extend the Abel-Jacobi map to the context of Quot schemes, and examine the relation between smoothness of generalised secant loci and their associated Brill-Noether loci. In one case, we indicate how formulas of Oprea-Pandharipande and Stark can be used to enumerate the generalised secant locus when it has and attains expected dimension zero.
Wed, 07. Jan at 14:15
WIAS, Erhard-Schm...
Tue, 13. Jan at 11:15
1.023 (BMS Room, ...
Wed, 14. Jan at 10:00
Weierstrass-Insti...
Wed, 14. Jan at 11:30
WIAS-406
Wed, 14. Jan at 14:15
WIAS, Erhard-Schm...
Wed, 14. Jan at 16:00
Wed, 14. Jan at 16:30
EN 058
Thu, 15. Jan at 17:15
HU Berlin, Instit...
Fri, 16. Jan
Tue, 20. Jan at 11:15
1.023 (BMS Room, ...
Wed, 21. Jan at 10:00
Weierstrass-Insti...
Wed, 21. Jan at 11:30
WIAS-406
Wed, 21. Jan at 14:15
WIAS, Erhard-Schm...
Uncertainty quantification for a model for a magnetostrictive material involving a hysteresis operator
Thu, 22. Jan at 15:15
Rudower Chaussee ...
Fri, 23. Jan
Fri, 23. Jan
Tue, 27. Jan at 11:15
1.023 (BMS Room, ...
Wed, 28. Jan at 10:00
Weierstrass-Insti...
Wed, 28. Jan at 14:15
WIAS, Erhard-Schm...
Curvature-driven pattern formation in biomembranes: A gradient flow approach
Wed, 28. Jan at 16:00
Wed, 28. Jan at 16:00
Thu, 29. Jan at 16:15
HU Berlin, Instit...
Thu, 29. Jan at 16:15
Equivalence between local and global Hadamard States with Robin boundary conditions on half-Minkowski spacetime
Abstract. We construct the fundamental solutions and Hadamard states for a Klein-Gordon field in half-Minkowski spacetime with Robin boundary conditions in arbitrary dimensions using a generalisation of the Robin-to-Dirichlet map. On the one hand this allows us to prove the uniqueness and support properties of the Green operators. On the other hand, we obtain a local representation for the Hadamard parametrix that provides the correct local definition of Hadamard states, capturing 'reflected' singularities from the spacetime timelike boundary. This allows us to prove the equivalence of our local Hadamard condition and the global Hadamard condition with a wave-front set described in terms of generalized broken bicharacteristics, obtaining a Radzikowski-like theorem in half-Minkowski spacetime. Joint work with B. Costeri, R. D. Singh and B. Juárez-Aubry -- ArXiv: 2509.26035 [math-ph]
Thu, 29. Jan at 17:15
HU Berlin, Instit...
Fri, 30. Jan
Tue, 10. Feb at 11:15
1.023 (BMS Room, ...
Wed, 11. Feb at 10:00
Weierstrass-Insti...
Linear Monge is All You Need
Abstract. In this talk, we explore the geometry of the Bures-Wasserstein space for potentially degenerate Gaussian measures on a separable Hilbert space, based on our recent work with Yoav Zemel. A key feature of our approach is its simplicity: relying only on elementary arguments from linear operator theory, we are able to derive explicit results without resorting to Kantorovich duality or Otto's Calculus. We provide a complete characterisation of both the Monge and Kantorovich problems in this context, regardless of the degeneracy of their measures. Furthermore, we show a simple way to construct all possible Wasserstein geodesics connecting two Gaussian measures. Finally, we generalise our results to characterise Wasserstein barycenters of Gaussian measures, borrowing the idea of Procrustes distance from statistical shape analysis.
Wed, 11. Feb at 10:00
Weierstrass-Insti...
Kernel ridge regression for spherical responses
Abstract. The aim is to propose a novel nonlinear regression framework for responses taking values on a hypersphere. Rather than performing tangent space regression, where all the sphere responses are lifted to a single tangent space on which the regression is performed, we estimate conditional Frechet means by minimizing squared distances on the nonlinear manifold. Yet, the tangent space serves as a linear predictor space where the regression function takes values. The framework integrates Riemannian geometry techniques with functional data analysis by modelling the regression function using methods from vector-valued reproducing kernel Hilbert space theory. This formulation enables the reduction of the infinite-dimensional estimation problem to a finite-dimensional one via a representer theorem and leads to an estimation algorithm by means of Riemannian gradient descent. Explicit checkable conditions on the data that ensure the existence and uniqueness of the minimizing estimator are given.
Wed, 11. Feb at 11:30
WIAS-406
Wed, 11. Feb at 14:15
WIAS, Erhard-Schm...
Wed, 11. Feb at 16:00
Wed, 11. Feb at 16:00
Thu, 12. Feb at 16:15
HU Berlin, Instit...
Thu, 12. Feb at 17:15
HU Berlin, Instit...
Sat, 14. Feb at 16:30
EN 058
Wed, 15. Apr at 14:15
WIAS, Erhard-Schm...
Thu, 16. Apr at 14:15
WIAS, Erhard-Schm...