• Geometry of continued fractions (Prof. Oleg Karpenkov)

    Shanahan B460 (HMC) and Zoom - Hybrid

    Title: Geometry of continued fractions Speaker:  Oleg Karpenkov, Department of Mathematical Sciences, University of Liverpool Abstract: In this talk we introduce a geometrical model of continued fractions and discuss its appearance in […]

  • Contact topology and geometry in high dimensions (Prof. Bahar Acu)

    Shanahan B460 (HMC) and Zoom - Hybrid

    Title: Contact topology and geometry in high dimensions Speaker: Bahar Acu, Department of Mathematics, Pitzer College Abstract: A very useful strategy in studying topological manifolds is to factor them into ``smaller" […]

  • Poster Session Fall 2022

    Margaret Fowler Garden, Scripps College Claremont, CA

    CLAREMONT CENTER for the MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES Fall 2022 Poster Session   Title Speaker(s) A New Basis for k-Local Class Functions Hannah Friedman A Quantile Deffuant-Weisbuch Model of Opinion Dynamics Julianna […]

  • Continuity Versus Uniform Continuity (Prof. Gerald Beer)

    Humanities Auditorium, Scripps College, and Zoom Claremont, CA, United States

    Title: Continuity Versus Uniform Continuity Speaker: Gerald Beer, Department of Mathematics, California State University Abstract: In this talk we discuss the class of metric spaces - called the UC-spaces - whose members have […]

  • An introduction to algebraic statistics (Prof. Luis David Garcia Puente)

    Humanities Auditorium, Scripps College, and Zoom Claremont, CA, United States

    Title: An introduction to algebraic statistics Speaker: Luis David Garcia Puente, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Colorado College Abstract: Algebraic statistics is an interdisciplinary field that uses tools from computational […]

  • Between Yes and No: making decisions under uncertainty (Prof. Ami Radunskaya)

    Humanities Auditorium, Scripps College, and Zoom Claremont, CA, United States

    Title: Between Yes and No: making decisions under uncertainty. Speaker: Ami Radunskaya, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Pomona College Abstract: Often we attempt to answer a question with a “yes” or a […]

  • How do mathematicians believe? (Prof. Brian P Katz)

    Humanities Auditorium, Scripps College, and Zoom Claremont, CA, United States

    Title: How do mathematicians believe? Speaker: Brian P Katz (BK), Department of Mathematics and Statistics, CSU, Long Beach Abstract: Love it or hate it, many people believe that mathematics gives humans access to a kind of truth that is more absolute and universal than other disciplines. If this claim is true, we must ask: what makes the […]

  • Human Computers in Astronomy: Women Astronomers at Mount Wilson Observatory during the Early Twentieth Century (Prof. Eun-Joo Ahn)

    Humanities Auditorium, Scripps College, and Zoom Claremont, CA, United States

    Title: Human Computers in Astronomy: Women Astronomers at Mount Wilson Observatory during the Early Twentieth Century Speaker: Eun-Joo Ahn, Department of History, UC Santa Barbara Abstract: Mount Wilson Observatory was founded by astrophysicist George Ellery Hale in 1904 with funding from the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Since then, it has become one of the most prominent […]

  • Frequentist Model Averaging in the Generalized Multinomial Logit Model (Prof. Tonia Zeng)

    Humanities Auditorium, Scripps College, and Zoom Claremont, CA, United States

    Title: Frequentist Model Averaging in the Generalized Multinomial Logit Model Speaker: Tonia Zeng, Applied Business Sciences and Economics, University of La Verne Abstract: The generalized multinomial logit (GMNL) model accommodates scale heterogeneity to the random parameters logit (RPL) model. It has been often used to study people's preferences and predict people's decisions in many areas, […]

  • Prof. Josiah Park

    Humanities Auditorium, Scripps College, and Zoom Claremont, CA, United States

    Title: Packing lines, minimizing energy, and applications to communications Speaker: Josiah Park, Department of Mathematics, Texas A&M University Abstract: Structured geometric point sets play important roles in coding theory, mathematical biology, computational chemistry, wireless communications, compressed sensing, and 'big data' applications due to their often desirable statistical properties for measurement and transmission. Best packings of […]