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Extra Form
Lecturer Gunnar E. Carlsson
Dept. Stanford University
date Mar 27, 2014

Creating information and knowledge from large and complex data sets is one the fundamental intellectual challenges currently being faced by the mathematical sciences. One approach to this problem comes from the mathematical subdiscipline called topology, which is the study of shape and of its higher dimensional analogues. This subject has thrived as a field within pure mathematics, but the last fifteen years has seen the development of topological methods for studying data sets, which are modeled as point clouds or finite metric spaces. I will survey this work, with examples.


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  1. Idempotents and topologies

  2. Recent progress on the Brascamp-Lieb inequality and applications

  3. Existence of positive solutions for φ-Laplacian systems

  4. Riemann-Hilbert correspondence for irregular holonomic D-modules

  5. Normal form reduction for unconditional well-posedness of canonical dispersive equations

  6. Random conformal geometry of Coulomb gas formalism

  7. Categorification of Donaldson-Thomas invariants

  8. Noncommutative Surfaces

  9. 31Mar
    by 김수현
    in Math Colloquia

    The Shape of Data

  10. Topological Mapping of Point Cloud Data

  11. Structures on Persistence Barcodes and Generalized Persistence

  12. Persistent Homology

  13. Topological aspects in the theory of aperiodic solids and tiling spaces

  14. Subgroups of Mapping Class Groups

  15. Irreducible Plane Curve Singularities

  16. Analytic torsion and mirror symmetry

  17. Fefferman's program and Green functions in conformal geometry

  18. 최고과학기술인상수상 기념강연: On the wild world of 4-manifolds

  19. 정년퇴임 기념강연: Volume Conjecture

  20. Queer Lie Superalgebras

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