Colloquium Chair Juan G. Restrepo
Location ECCR 265
Time 3:00 pm, Fridays
Refreshments Between 2:30 pm and 3:00 pm outside the APPM Office (ECOT 225)


Date Speaker Affiliation Title
01/18/13 Juri Toomre Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics (JILA) and Department of Astrophysical and Planetary Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder Touching the Inside of a Convecting Star and its Magnetic Dynamo
01/25/13 Anna Gilbert Department of Mathematics, University of Michigan What's the frequency, Kenneth?: A survey of Fourier sampling algorithms
02/01/13 Franck Vernerey Department of Civil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering, University of Colorado Boulder Mathematical Model Of The Coupled Mechanisms Of Cell Adhesion, Contraction And Spreading
02/08/13 Mihaly Horanyi Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) and Department of Physics, University of Colorado Boulder The Lunar Surface: A Dusty Plasma Laboratory
02/15/13 Maria Schonbek Department of Mathematics, University of California, Santa Cruz Questions on Liquid crystals
02/22/13 Phil Armitage Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics (JILA) and Department of Astrophysical and Planetary Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder Dynamical mysteries of extrasolar planetary systems
03/01/13 David Noone Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences and Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder Estimating the hidden history of water in clouds and the subtropical atmosphere
03/07/13* H.T. Banks Co-Director, Center for Quantitative Sciences in Biomedicine, North Carolina State University Mathematical and Statistical Modeling of Human Lymphocyte Proliferation Using CFSE
Data
03/12/13** Murray Cox Department of Mathematics and Physical Sciences, Southwestern Adventist University It's Not Weird If It Works
03/14/13+ Garrett Rea Department of Mathematics, Missouri Southern State University The Evolution of the Heat Equation from the 1800’s Till Now
03/15/13 Alberto Bressan Department of Mathematics, Penn State University Optima and equilibria for traffic flow on a network of roads.
03/21/13++ Stephen Kuhn UTeaChattanooga Program, University of Tennessee, Chattanooga Customized Web Homework: How Why? To What Effect?
03/22/13 Max Gunzburger Department of Scientific Computing, Florida State University A nonlocal vector calculus and nonlocal models for diffusion and mechanics
03/29/13 Spring Break - No Classes This Week
04/05/13 M. Gregory Forest Carolina Center for Interdisciplinary Applied Mathematics, Department of Mathematics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill The Virtual Lung Project at UNC
04/12/13 Mahesh Varanasi Department of Electrical, Computer, and Energy Engineering, University of Colorado Boulder On Information Transmission
04/15/13^ Ryan Croke Senior Test Engineer, Raytheon Company A Brief Introduction to Markov Chains and Some Applications in Industry
04/18/13^^ Scott Strong Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics, Colorado School of Mines Quantum Hydrodynamics and Vortex Filaments
04/19/13 Margaret Cheney Department of Mathematics, Colorado State University Introduction to Radar Imaging
04/26/13 Stefan Llewellyn Smith
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering; University of California, San Diego
Hollow Vortices
05/03/13 Harvey Segur
Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Colorado Boulder
The nonlinear Schrödinger equation, dissipation and ocean swell


* Special Colloquium, meeting in ECCR 1B51.

** Instructor Search Colloquium, offered in ECCR 257 at noon.

+ Instructor Search Colloquium, offered in KOBL 330 at 3:30 PM

++ Instructor Search Colloquium, offered in ECCR 245 at 1:00 PM

^ Instructor Search Colloquium, offered in ECCR 257 at noon.

^^ Instructor Search Colloquium, offered in ECCR 257 at noon

In many modern problems across areas such as genomics, computer vision, and natural language process, one is interested in learning a Sparse Structured Input-Output Regression Model (SIORM), in which the input variables of the model such as variations on a human genome bear rich structure due to the genetic and functional dependences between entities in the genome; and the output variables such as the disease traits are also structured because of their interrelatedness. A SIORM can nicely capture rich structural properties in the data, but raises severe computational and theoretical challenge on consistent model identification.

In this talk, I will present models, algorithms, and theories that learn Sparse SIORMs of various kinds in very high dimensional input/output space, with fast and highly scalable optimization procedures, and strong statistical guarantees. I will demonstrate application of our approach to problems in large-scale genome association analysis and web image understanding.

This is joint work with Seyoung Kim, Xi Chen, Seunghak Lee, and Bin Zhao.