2025/2026 SEMINARS

FALL

WINTER

SPRING

Math 208 - Algebraic Geometry

Oprea, Dragos

Oprea, Dragos

Oprea, Dragos

Math 209 - Number Theory

Bucur, Alina

Bucur, Alina

Bucur, Alina

Math 211A - Algebra

Golsefidy, Alireza

Golsefidy, Alireza

Golsefidy, Alireza

Math 211B - Group Actions

Frisch, Joshua

Frisch, Joshua

Frisch, Joshua

Math 218 - Biological Systems

Miller, Pearson

Miller, Pearson

Miller, Pearson

Math 243 - Functional Analysis

Ganesan, Priyanga & Vigdorovich, Itamar

Ganesan, Priyanga & Vigdorovich, Itamar

Vigdorovich, Itamar

Math 248 - Real Analysis

Bejenaru, Ioan

Bejenaru, Ioan

Bejenaru, Ioan

Math 258 - Differential Geometry

Spolaor, Luca

Spolaor, Luca

Spolaor, Luca

Math 268 - Logic

TBD

TBD

TBD

Math 269 - Combinatorics

Rhoades, Brendon & Warnke, Lutz

Rhoades, Brendon & Warnke, Lutz

Rhoades, Brendon & Warnke, Lutz

Math 278A - CCoM

Cheng, Li-Tien

Cheng, Li-Tien

Cheng, Li-Tien

Math 278B - Math of Info, Data

Cloninger, Alexander

Cloninger, Alexander

Cloninger, Alexander

Math 278C - Optimization

Nie, Jiawang

Nie, Jiawang

Nie, Jiawang

Math 288A - Probability

Peca-Medlin, John

Peca-Medlin, John

Peca-Medlin, John

Math 288B - Statistics

TBD

TBD

TBD

Math 292 - Topology Seminar

Chow, Bennett

Chow, Bennett

Chow, Bennett

Tue, Jan 20 2026
  • 11:00 am
    Amos Nevo - University of Chicago/Technion
    Analysis on spaces with exponential volume growth

    Math 243: Functional Analysis Seminar

    APM 6402

    We consider ball averages on discrete groups, and associated Hardy-Littlewood maximal operator, with the balls defined by invariant metrics associated with a variety of length functions. Under natural assumptions on the rough radial structure of the group under consideration, we establish a maximal inequality of weak-type for the Hardy-Littlewood operator. These assumptions are related to a coarse radial median inequality, to almost exact polynomial-exponential growth of balls, and to the rough radial rapid decay property. We give a variety of examples where the rough radial structure assumptions hold, including any lattice in a connected semisimple Lie group with finite center, with respect to the Riemannian distance on symmetric space restricted to an orbit of the lattice. Other examples include right-angled Artin groups, Coxeter groups and braid groups, with a suitable choice of word metric. For non-elementary word-hyperbolic groups we establish that the Hardy-Littlewood maximal operator with respect to balls defined by a word metric satisfies the weak-type (1,1)-maximal inequality, which is the optimal result. This is joint work with Koji Fujiwara, Kyoto University.

  • 1:00 pm
    Finn Southerland - UCSD
    Region counting on another level

    Food for Thought

    APM 7321

    Hyperplane arrangements cut space into `regions', which we like to count. Although all regions are $n$-dimensional, some are more bounded than others, captured by the `level' of a region. Can we refine our region counting by level? And how do level counts interact with other properties of the arrangement? This talk should be highly approachable, requiring only the ability to visualize high-dimensional objects.

Thu, Jan 22 2026
  • 4:00 pm
    Professor Amos Nero - University of Chicago/Technion
    New directions and some effective optimal results in Diophantine approximation on homogeneous spaces

    Mathematics Colloquium

    APM 6402

    Our set up will consist of a countable group acting on a metric space with dense orbits. Our goal will be to develop effective gauges that measure how dense such orbits actually are, or equivalently how efficient is the approximation of a general point in the space by the points in the orbit.  We will describe several such gauges, whose definitions are motivated by classical Diophantine approximation, and are related to approximation exponents, discrepancy and equidistribution. We will then describe some of the (non-classical) examples we aim to analyze, focusing mainly on certain countable subgroups of the special linear or affine group, or of the groups of isometries of hyperbolic spaces, acting on some associated homogeneous spaces. In this set-up it is possible to establish optimal effective Diophantine approximation results in certain cases. We will very briefly indicate some ingredients of the methods involved, keeping the exposition as accessible as possible. We will also indicate some of the many challenging open problems that this circle of questions present. Based partly on previous joint work with Anish Ghosh and Alex Gorodnik, and partly on recent work with Mikolaj Fraczyk and Alex Gorodnik. 

Fri, Jan 23 2026
  • 11:00 am
    Matt Jacobs - UCSB
    TBD

    Math 278B: Mathematics of Information, Data, and Signals

    APM 6402

Tue, Jan 27 2026
  • 11:00 am
    Ben Major - UCLA
    TBA

    Math 243: Functional Analysis Seminar

    APM 6402

Fri, Jan 30 2026
  • 11:00 am
    Yifan Chen - UCLA
    TBD

    Math 278B: Mathematics of Information, Data, and Signals

    APM 6402

Mon, Feb 2 2026
  • 2:00 pm
    Casey Perdue
    TBD

    Advancement to Candidacy

    APM 5829

Wed, Feb 4 2026
  • 4:00 pm
    Govind Menon - Brown University
    Towards a geometric theory of deep learning

    Department of Mathematics Colloquim

    APM 6402

    The mathematical core of deep learning is function approximation by neural networks trained on data using stochastic gradient descent. I will explain an emerging geometric framework for the analysis of this process. This includes a collection of rigorous results on training dynamics for the deep linear network (DLN) as well as general principles for arbitrary neural networks. The mathematics ranges over a surprisingly broad range, including geometric invariant theory, random matrix theory, and minimal surfaces. However, little background in these areas will be assumed and the talk will be accessible to a broad audience. The talk is based on joint work with several co-authors: Yotam Alexander, Nadav Cohen (Tel Aviv), Kathryn Lindsey (Boston College), Alan Chen, Zsolt Veraszto and Tianmin Yu (Brown).

Fri, Feb 6 2026
  • 11:00 am
    TBD
    TBD

    Math 278B: Mathematics of Information, Data, and Signals

    APM 6402

Tue, Feb 10 2026
  • 11:00 am
    Paolo Leonetti - Università degli Studi dell'Insubria
    TBA

    Math 243: Functional Analysis Seminar

    APM 6402

Thu, Feb 12 2026
  • 4:00 pm
    Dave Penneys - Ohio State University
    TBA

    Math 295: Colloquium Seminar

    APM 6402

    TBA

Fri, Feb 13 2026
  • 11:00 am
    Thomas Madden - UCSD
    TBD

    Math 278B: Mathematics of Information, Data, and Signals

    APM 6402

Tue, Feb 17 2026
  • 11:00 am
    Bill Helton - UCSD
    TBA

    Math 243: Functional Analysis Seminar

    APM 6402

Fri, Feb 20 2026
  • 11:00 am
    TBD
    TBD

    Math 278B: Mathematics of Information, Data, and Signals

    APM 6402

Tue, Feb 24 2026
  • 11:00 am
    Matt Kennedy - University of Waterloo
    TBA

    Math 243: Functional Analysis Seminar

    APM 6402

Fri, Feb 27 2026
  • 11:00 am
    TBD
    TBD

    Math 278B: Mathematics of Information, Data, and Signals

    APM 6402

Tue, Mar 3 2026
  • 11:00 am
    Linfeng - UCSD
    TBA

    Math 243: Functional Analysis Seminar

    APM 6402

Fri, Mar 6 2026
  • 11:00 am
    TBD
    TBD

    Math 278B: Mathematics of Information, Data, and Signals

    APM 6402

Tue, Mar 10 2026
  • 11:00 am
    Hui Tan, Changying Ding - UCLA
    TBA

    Math 243: Functional Analysis Seminar

    APM 6402

Fri, Mar 13 2026
  • 11:00 am
    TBD
    TBD

    Math 278B: Mathematics of Information, Data, and Signals

    APM 6402