Week of September 28, 2025

Wed Oct 1, 2025
3:00pm to 4:00pm - 340P Rowland Hall - Combinatorics and Probability
Simone Bombari - (IST Austria)
Privacy for Free in the Overparameterized Regime

Abstract: Differentially private gradient descent (DP-GD) is a popular algorithm to train deep learning models with provable guarantees on the privacy of the training data. In the last decade, the problem of understanding its performance cost with respect to standard GD has received remarkable attention from the research community, which has led to upper bounds on the excess population risk in different learning settings. However, such bounds typically degrade with over-parameterization, i.e., as the number of parameters p gets larger than the number of training samples n — a regime which is ubiquitous in current deep-learning practice. As a result, the lack of theoretical insights leaves practitioners without clear guidance, leading some to reduce the effective number of trainable parameters to improve performance, while others use larger models to achieve better results through scale. In this work, we show that in the popular random features model with quadratic loss, for any sufficiently large p, privacy can be obtained for free, i.e., the with vanishing excess population risk, not only when the privacy parameter ε has constant order, but also in the strongly private setting ε = o(1). This challenges the common wisdom that over-parameterization inherently hinders performance in private learning.
 

Link to paper: https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2423072122

Thu Oct 2, 2025
1:00pm - RH 306 - Harmonic Analysis
Priyanga Ganesan - (UCSD)
Quantum Non-Local Games

In recent years, nonlocal games have received significant attention in operator algebras and resulted in highly fruitful interactions, including the recent resolution of the Connes Embedding Problem. A nonlocal game involves two non-communicating players (Alice and Bob) who cooperatively play to win against a referee. In this talk, I will provide an introduction to the theory of non-local games and quantum correlation classes. We will discuss the role of C*-algebras and operator systems in the study of their perfect strategies. It will be shown that mathematical structures arising from entanglement-assisted strategies for nonlocal games can be naturally interpreted and studied using tools from operator algebras. I will then present a general framework of non local games involving quantum inputs and classical outputs and use them to discuss a quantum graph coloring game.

 

1:00pm to 1:50pm - RH 340N - Algebra
William Ren - (UC Irvine)
Learning seminar - group representations