Colloquium
- Farhad Pourkamali-Anaraki, Department of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, University of Colorado DenverEvaluation of Classification Models in Limited Data Scenarios with Application to Additive ManufacturingScientific observations and
- Daniel Larremore, Department of Computer Science, University of Colorado BoulderEstimating the Mitigation Potential of Screening Programs for Infectious DiseasesThe premise of screening programs for infectious diseases is that screening tests taken
- Applied Mathematics Colloquium - George KarniadakisGeorge Karniadakis, Department of Applied Mathematics, Brown UniversityFrom Neural PDEs to Neural Operators: Blending data and physics for fast predictionsAbstract: We will review
- Alex Townsend, Department of Mathematics, Cornell UniversityThe art and science of low-rank techniquesMatrices and tensors that appear in computational mathematics are so often well-approximated by low-rank objects. Since random
- Habib Ammari, Department of Mathematics, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich, SwitzerlandFunctional analytic methods for discrete approximations of subwavelength resonator systemsIn this lecture, the speaker will review mathematical and
- Bard Ermentrout, Department of Mathematics, University of PittsburghPhase in Space: Spatiotemporal dynamics of nonlocally coupled oscillatorsThe ability of neuroscientists to record large regions of the brain at high temporal resolution has
- Lexing Ying, Department of Mathematics, Stanford UniversityProny's method, analytic continuation, and quantum signal processingProny's method is a powerful algorithm for identifying frequencies and amplitudes from equally spaced signals. It is
- Nathan Kutz, Department of Applied Mathematics, University of WashingtonThe Future of Governing EquationsMachine learning and AI algorithms are transforming a diverse number of fields in science and engineering. This is largely due their success in
- Bryan Quaife, Department of Scientific Computing, Florida State UniversityThe Role of Permeability in BiomembranesBiomembranes permeate small molecules into a cell while not allowing large molecules to pass through. Even in the absence of osmolarity
- Enkeleida Lushi, Department of Mathematics, New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT)Models and simulations of micro-swimmer motion in complex confinementMany micro-swimmers (e.g.bacteria, algae, spermatozoa, active colloids) live and move in