Speaker: 

Roman Vershynin

Institution: 

University of Michigan

Time: 

Wednesday, March 1, 2017 - 4:00pm to 5:00pm

Location: 

RH 306

Many real-world networks -- social, technological, biological -- have wonderful structures. Some structures may be apparent (such as trees) while others may be hidden (such as communities). How can we discover hidden structures? Known approaches to "structure mining" in networks come from a variety of disciplines, including probability,  statistics, combinatorics, physics, optimization, theoretical computer science, signal processing and information theory. We will focus on new probabilistic approaches to structure mining. They bring together insights from random matrices, random graphs and semidefinite programming.

 

This is a joint applied math and probability seminar.