• CCMS Field Committee Meeting

    Shanahan B460, Harvey Mudd College 301 Platt Blvd., Claremont, CA, United States

    The Field Committee Meeting is our chance to socialize with our colleagues and coordinate our course offerings for the coming academic year (2020-2021). Please come to discuss course offerings and other synergistic items. Refreshments starting at 3:15, meeting at 4:15.

  • Dragging the roots of a polynomial to the unit circle (Sinai Robins, University of Sao Paulo)

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

    Several conditions are known for a self-inversive polynomial that ascertain the location of its roots, and we present a framework for comparison of those conditions. We associate a parametric family of polynomials p_α(x) to each such polynomial p, and define cn(p), il(p) to be the sharp threshold values of α that guarantee that, for all […]

  • Castelnuovo-Mumford regularity of edge ideals of graphs (Siamak Yassemi, University of Tehran)

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

    Let K be a field and S = K be the polynomial ring in n variables over K. For a graded S-module M with minimal free resolution the Castelnuovo-Mumford regularity  is defined. We survey a number of recent studies of the Castelnuovo-Mumford regularity of the ideals related to a graph and their (symbolic) powers. Our […]

  • Stefano Vidussi (UCRiverside)

    Title: The BNS invariant of the fundamental group of a surface bundle over a surface. Abstract: We will discuss some new results on the Bieri-Neumann-Strebel invariant of these groups, showing […]

  • A Tauberian theorem and some of its applications

    Freeberg Forum, LC 62, Kravis Center, CMC

    In general terms, a Tauberian theorem deals with the relationship between the properties of one transform of a measure with those of another transform. We will introduce the notion of a Tauberian theorm, and present our own recent theorem in this direction. Our theorem provides a uniform theory for the construction of certain localized kernels […]

  • GEMS Workshop: Superheroes vs. Supercomputers with Professor Jeho Park of Claremont McKenna College

    Shanahan 1480, Harvey Mudd College 301 Platt Blvd., Claremont, CA, United States

      TOPIC: Superheroes vs. Supercomputers Superheroes like Wonder Woman, Black Panther, Superman, and Captain Marvel, just to name a few, all have "super" power and they save the world from "super"-villains. Well, just one catch--they are not real. In our real world, there are computers built for super power to save the (real) world. In this […]

  • Covering point-sets with parallel hyperplanes and sparse signal recovery (Lenny Fukshansky, CMC)

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

    Let S be a set of k > n points in n-dimensional Euclidean space. How many parallel hyperplanes are needed to cover it? In fact, it is easy to prove that every such set can be covered by k-n+1 parallel hyperplanes, but do there exist sets that cannot be covered by fewer parallel hyperplanes? We […]

  • Tommaso Cremaschi (USC)

    Title: Volumes and filling collections of multicurves Abstract: In this talk we will be concerned with links L in a Seifert-Fibered space N such that their projection to the base […]

  • Kernel approaches in global statistical distances, local measure detection, and active learning

    Freeberg Forum, LC 62, Kravis Center, CMC

    In this talk, we'll discuss the problem of constructing meaningful distances between probability distributions given only finite samples from each distribution.  We approach this through the use of data-adaptive and localized kernels, and in a variety of contexts.  First, we construct locally adaptive kernels to define fast pairwise distances between distributions, with applications to unsupervised […]

  • Quandle module quivers (Sam Nelson, CMC)

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

    Quandle coloring quivers categorify the quandle counting invariant. In this talk we enhance the quandle coloring quiver invariant with quandle modules, generalizing both the quiver invariant and the quandle module polynomial invariant. This is joint work with Karma Istanbouli (Scripps College).