Week of Events
Sunday, April 26, 2026
No events on this day.
Monday, April 27, 2026
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April 27, 2026 -From ICON to GenICON: In-Context Operator Learning with Uncertainty Quantification (Siting Liu, UCR)
From ICON to GenICON: In-Context Operator Learning with Uncertainty Quantification (Siting Liu, UCR)
Abstract: I will introduce In-Context Operator Networks (ICON), a framework in which a single neural network learns solution operators for differential equations directly from a few prompted input-output examples at inference time, without any weight updates. ICON acts as a few-shot learner across forward and inverse problems for ODEs, PDEs, and mean-field control. I will […]
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
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April 28, 2026 -Coordinate ring of the universal centralizer via Demazure operators (Tom Gannon, UCR)
Coordinate ring of the universal centralizer via Demazure operators (Tom Gannon, UCR)
One of the key objects used in Ngo's proof of the fundamental lemma is the group scheme of universal centralizers associated to a split reductive group G. In this talk, we'll discuss forthcoming work, joint with Victor Ginzburg, which describes the coordinate ring of the group scheme of universal centralizers in terms of the root datum of G using Demazure (or divided […]
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
No events on this day.
Thursday, April 30, 2026
No events on this day.
Friday, May 1, 2026
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May 1, 2026 -CCMS Colloquium: Andrew Fiss (Michigan Technological University)
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May 1, 2026 -An Exact Algorithm for the Unanimous Vote Problem (Feyza Duman Keles, NYU)
CCMS Colloquium: Andrew Fiss (Michigan Technological University)
CCMS Colloquium invites you to a talk by Andrew Fiss (Michigan Technological University) Title: “Singing American Math: College Traditions from Book Burnings to Observatory Parties, 1880s-1920s" Abstract: “Singing Math” is a practice that linked American colleges of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. A part of broader college singing traditions, it stood apart because of its […]
An Exact Algorithm for the Unanimous Vote Problem (Feyza Duman Keles, NYU)
Abstract: Consider n independent, biased coins, each with a known probability of heads. Presented with an ordering of these coins, flip (i.e., toss) each coin once, in that order, until we have observed both a head and a tail, or flipped all coins. The Unanimous Vote problem asks us to find the ordering that minimizes […]
Saturday, May 2, 2026
No events on this day.