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Applied math organizational meeting

Emmy Noether Room, Millikan 1021, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, California

We will have an organizational meeting for the applied math seminar today. Anyone who is interested in suggesting speakers and/or organizing applied math seminar is welcome to come. 

Diffusion, Social Networks, and Logic (Pavel Naumov, CMC)

Emmy Noether Room, Millikan 1021, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, California

Once a new commercial product, technology, political opinion, or social norm is adopted by a few people, these few often put peer pressure on others to consider adopting it as well. Those who adopt next put even more pressure on the rest of the population. This cascading “epidemic” effect is often called diffusion in social […]

Agent-Based and Continuous Models of Locust Hopper Bands: The Role of Intermittent Motion, Alignment, Attraction and Repulsion (Andrew J. Bernoff, HMC)

Emmy Noether Room, Millikan 1021, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, California

Locust swarms pose a major threat to agriculture, notably in northern Africa and the Middle East. In the early stages of aggregation, locusts form hopper bands. These are coordinated groups that march in columnar structures that are often kilometers long and may contain millions of individuals. We propose a model for the formation of locust […]

Minimal Gaussian Partitions, Clustering Hardness and Voting (Steven Heilman, USC)

Emmy Noether Room, Millikan 1021, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, California

A single soap bubble has a spherical shape since it minimizes its surface area subject to a fixed enclosed volume of air.  When two soap bubbles collide, they form a "double-bubble" composed of three spherical caps.  The double-bubble minimizes total surface area among all sets enclosing two fixed volumes.  This was proven mathematically in a […]

CFTP: the algorithm ERGM deserves, but not the one it needs right now (Matt Moores, University of Wollongong)

Emmy Noether Room, Millikan 1021, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, California

The exchange algorithm enables Bayesian posterior inference for models with intractable likelihoods, such as Ising, Potts, or exponential random graph models (ERGM). Crucially, this algorithm relies on an auxiliary Markov chain to obtain an unbiased sample from the generative distribution of the model.             It was originally proposed to use coupling from the past (CFTP) for […]

Crossing the Threshold: The Role of Demographic Stochasticity in the Evolution of Cooperation (Tom LoFaro, Gustavus Adolphus College)

Shanahan 3465, Harvey Mudd College 301 Platt Blvd., Claremont, CA, United States

When Charles Darwin began writing “On the Origin of Species” he knew that explaining cooperative behavior in the context of “survival of the fittest” was problematic.  In fact, this apparent contradiction puzzled ecologists for many years after.  In this talk we will discuss a mathematical model of the evolution of cooperation developed by Doebeli, Blarer, […]

Digital sequences for frequency hopping CDMA systems (Lenny Fukshansky, CMC)

Emmy Noether Room, Millikan 1021, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, California

Frequency hopping is a method of transmitting signals by rapidly switching between many frequency channels, following some sequence of frequencies known to the transmitter and the receiver. This technique is used in the CDMA (code division multiple access) systems, and has many civilian and military applications. For successful transmission minimizing signal interference, we want to use sets […]

Turing mechanism for homeostatic control of synaptic density during C. elegans growth (Heather Zinn Brooks, UCLA)

Emmy Noether Room, Millikan 1021, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, California

It has been observed that motor neuron synapses in the worm C. elegans are remarkably evenly spaced, even during growth and development. In this work, we propose a novel mechanism for Turing pattern formation that provides a possible explanation for the regular spacing of synapses along the ventral cord of C. elegans during development. The […]

A renormalization approach to existence of the blow-up solutions of the Navier-Stokes equations (Denis Gaidashev, Uppsala University, Sweden)

Emmy Noether Room, Millikan 1021, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, California

The Navier-Stokes existence and smoothness problem is one of the most important open problems in modern mathematics.   Ya. Sinai and D. Li have proposed a renormalization approach to constructing a counter-example to existence. In this approach, existence of  a blow-up solution (a solution whose energy becomes infinite in finite time) is equivalent to existence of fixed […]

A Martingale Approach to the Question of Fiscal Stimulus (Michael Imerman, CGU)

Emmy Noether Room, Millikan 1021, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, California

Joint work with Larry Shepp & Philip Ernst In this paper we develop a mathematical model to address an ongoing politico-economic debate between Democrats and Republicans. Democrats in the US say that government spending can be used to “grease the wheels’ of the economy, create wealth, and increase employment; the Republicans say that government spending […]

Transfinite $\zeta$-metrics (Zair Ibragimov, CMC)

Emmy Noether Room, Millikan 1021, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, California

I will discuss the concept of transfinite ζ-metrics. In some details I will discuss transfinite Apollonian metric in the settings of semi-metric spaces. I will discuss specific examples of domains where the transfinite Apollonian metric can be computed explicitly. This is a preliminary work.