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2025/2026 SEMINARS |
FALL |
WINTER |
SPRING |
|---|---|---|---|
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Math 208 - Algebraic Geometry |
Oprea, Dragos |
Oprea, Dragos |
Oprea, Dragos |
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Math 209 - Number Theory |
Bucur, Alina |
Bucur, Alina |
Bucur, Alina |
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Math 211A - Algebra |
Golsefidy, Alireza |
Golsefidy, Alireza |
Golsefidy, Alireza |
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Math 211B - Group Actions |
Frisch, Joshua |
Frisch, Joshua |
Frisch, Joshua |
|
Math 218 - Biological Systems |
Miller, Pearson |
Miller, Pearson |
Miller, Pearson |
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Math 243 - Functional Analysis |
Ganesan, Priyanga & Vigdorovich, Itamar |
Ganesan, Priyanga & Vigdorovich, Itamar |
Vigdorovich, Itamar |
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Math 248 - Real Analysis |
Bejenaru, Ioan |
Bejenaru, Ioan |
Bejenaru, Ioan |
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Math 258 - Differential Geometry |
Spolaor, Luca |
Spolaor, Luca |
Spolaor, Luca |
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Math 268 - Logic |
TBD |
TBD |
TBD |
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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 |
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Math 278B - Math of Info, Data |
Cloninger, Alexander |
Cloninger, Alexander |
Cloninger, Alexander |
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Math 278C - Optimization |
Nie, Jiawang |
Nie, Jiawang |
Nie, Jiawang |
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Math 288A - Probability |
Peca-Medlin, John |
Peca-Medlin, John |
Peca-Medlin, John |
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Math 288B - Statistics |
TBD |
TBD |
TBD |
|
Math 292 - Topology Seminar |
Chow, Bennett |
Chow, Bennett |
Chow, Bennett |
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11:00 am
Henry Pritchard - UC San Diego
TBA
Math 278B: Mathematics of Information, Data, and Signals
APM 2402
-
3:00 pm
Harish Kannan - UC San Diego
Spatiotemporal dynamics of bacterial colony development
Final Defense
APM 6218 ; https://ucsd.zoom.us/j/
99049199673
-
4:00 pm
Prof. Kazuma Shimomoto - Institute of Science Tokyo
Adic perturbation method in commutative rings
Math 208: Seminar in Algebraic Geometry
APM 7321
AbstractIn this talk, we discuss a method using Zariski localization to study how singularities of certain algebras such as Rees algebras or rational localizations behave under perturbation of defining ideals. If time permits, I will talk about a potential application to the almost purity theorem.
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1:15 pm
Johann Birnick - UC San Diego
Neural Network Quantization Algorithms and Lattices
Advancement to Candidacy
APM 6218
-
2:00 pm
Gunnar Carlsson
Topology, Data Science, and Deep Learning
HDSI Distinguished Seminar
HDSI Multipurpose Room 123
Zoom Link: http://bit.ly/HDSI-Seminars AbstractApproximating data sets by graphs and simplicial complexes has been shown to be a very useful way to obtain qualitative information about data, and more recently has been shown to similarly contribute to artificial intelligence. I will discuss the mathematics around this, with examples from various domains.
BIO: Gunnar Carlsson is the Ann and Bill Swindells Professor Professor of Mathematics, Emeritus, at Stanford University, and a pioneer in the field of computational topology. His research focuses on the application of topological methods to the analysis of high-dimensional, complex data, a discipline known as Topological Data Analysis (TDA). Professor Carlsson is perhaps best known for leading the "Topological Methods in Data Analysis" project (supported by DARPA), which catalyzed the development of persistent homology and mapper algorithms. Beyond his academic contributions, he co-founded Ayasdi, a company dedicated to utilizing TDA for industrial-scale machine learning and data science. He holds a Ph.D. from Stanford and has previously held faculty positions at the University of Chicago, the University of California, San Diego, and Princeton University.
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3:00 pm
Prof. Dan Kaplan - CSU Long Beach
Classifying symplectic resolutions
Math 211A: Seminar in Algebra
APM 7321
AbstractSymplectic resolutions arise in representation theory (Springer resolution), algebraic geometry (Hilbert--Chow morphism), and mathematical physics (3D mirror symmetry). There is a program to classify all possible symplectic resolutions of a given singularity. This classification simplifies when the singularity is conical, as it suffices to resolve any neighborhood of the cone point.
In ongoing work with Travis Schedler, we extend the perspective beyond conical singularities. Surprisingly, local resolutions of conical neighborhoods extend and glue uniquely to a global resolution, provided they are monodromy-free and chosen compatibly.
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11:00 am
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11:00 am
Jicong Fan - The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen
Robust Learning for Anomaly Detection in Complex and Imperfect Data
Center for Computational Mathematics Seminar
APM 2402 and Zoom ID 964 2834 3800
AbstractAnomaly detection is widely used in real-world applications such as industrial fault detection, quality control, cybersecurity, fraud detection, healthcare monitoring, and scientific data analysis. In these scenarios, abnormal patterns are often rare but critical. However, practical anomaly detection is challenging because real-world data are usually noisy, incomplete, high-dimensional, graph-structured, or collected from heterogeneous domains, while reliable anomaly labels are often limited or unavailable.
This talk presents a line of research on robust learning for anomaly detection in complex and imperfect data. I will discuss methods for tabular anomaly detection under noise and missing values, graph-level anomaly detection, automatic hyper-parameter optimization, semi-supervised anomaly detection, and universal outlier detection across diverse domains. Together, these works aim to develop anomaly detection methods that are robust, adaptive, and generalizable for real-world applications.
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1:00 pm
Abhik Pal - UC San Diego
Equivariant Sheaf Cohomology of Supervarieties via Syzygies
Final Defense
APM 7321
-
4:00 pm
Runqiu Xu - UC San Diego
Polynomial Method for $U_N$ and $SU_N$ Weingarten Calculus: with an Application to the Alon-Tarsi conjecture
Final Defense
Mayayer Hall 2702 / Zoom: https://ucsd.zoom.us/j/96382773172
AbstractWeingarten calculus provides a representation-theoretic framework for evaluating Haar integrals of products of matrix entries over compact groups. In this talk, I will present a polynomial method for $U_N$ and $SU_N$ Weingarten calculus, focusing on contingency tables, Kostka operators, and polarization. Generating polynomials encode matrix-entry integrals, while contingency tables organize commutative monomials and lead to monomial integral formulas through Kostka-type operators. Polarization then restores the ordered information needed to recover link integrals from the same generating polynomial. I will also explain how the $SU_N$ theory differs from the $U_N$ theory: the determinant-one condition introduces shifted matching conditions and determinant powers in the character expansion. Finally, I will discuss an application to the Alon--Tarsi conjecture, where the special determinant type $SU_N$ integral recovers the signed difference between even and odd Latin squares and leads to new combinatorial interpretations through rectangular symmetric-group characters and permutation factorizations.
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2:00 pm
Bryan Hu - UC San Diego
Differential Operators for Quaternionic Modular Forms
Thesis Defense
APM 7321 & Zoom (Link TBA)
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3:00 pm
Qingyuan Chen - UC San Diego
On Preservation of Rokhlin Entropy under Shannon Orbit Equivalence
Final Defense
APM 6218
-
4:00 pm
Ben Church - Stanford University
Non-unirationality of surfaces and moduli spaces in positive characteristic
Math 209: Number Theory Seminar
APM 7321
AbstractA variety is unirational if it admits a dominant rational map from projective space. In characteristic zero, global tensor forms obstruct unirationality. This is the principle behind the Harris–Mumford theorem (1982): M_g is of general type, and a fortiori not unirational, for g large. In positive characteristic the picture is far wilder, owing to the existence of inseparable maps, and as a result the unirationality of only a handful of moduli spaces is understood.
I will introduce new techniques for obstructing unirationality in positive characteristic, inspired by methods for proving hyperbolicity in complex geometry. As applications, I give a counterexample to Shioda's 1977 conjecture that a simply connected surface in positive characteristic is unirational if and only if it is supersingular. I also show that many Hilbert modular varieties in positive characteristic are not unirational or even covered by rational or elliptic curves.
[pre-talk at 3:00PM]
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5:00 pm
Haoyu Li - UC San Diego
Construct Expander Families for Cayley Graphs
Advancement to Candidacy
APM 7218
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10:00 am
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8:00 am
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12:00 pm
Collin Cranston - UC San Diego
Random Matrix Theory for Linearized Neural Networks
PhD Defense
APM 6402 and Zoom Meeting ID 958 1849 6328
AbstractNon-linear Random Matrix Theory (RMT) has recently emerged as a powerful paradigm for the theoretical understanding of deep learning theory. Throughout recent works, a universality principle, the \textit{Gaussian Equivalence Theorem} (GET), has become an indispensable tool allowing for the behavior of complex nonlinear neural networks to be understood through tractable linear kernel models. This thesis contributes to this emerging field, first by using the GET universality principle to derive a novel scaling law in Neural Tangent Kernel (NTK) regression, and second by studying the implications of this idealized linear equivalence on a high-dimensional nonlinearly separable dataset.

