2023-06-19 ~ 2023-06-23
LocationVenue | Online | ID | Password |
---|---|---|---|
Online | Zoom | 361 038 6975 | BIMSA |
- Tyrone Cutler ( Bielefeld University, BIMSA )
- Sergei Ivanov ( BIMSA )
- Stephen Theriault ( University of Southampton )
- Jie Wu ( 吴杰, BIMSA )
- Henry Adams ( Colorado State University )
- Yasuhiko Asao ( Fukuoka University )
- Valerii Bardakov ( Sobolev Institute of Mathematics )
- Shaul Barkan ( Einstein Institute of Mathematics )
- Stefan Behrens ( Universität Bielefeld )
- Emmanuel-Dror Farjoun ( Hebrew University )
- Daciberg Lima Gonçalves ( Universidade de Sao Paulo,Universidade de Sao Paulo )
- Mark Grant ( University of Aberdeen )
- Alexander Grigor'yan ( Universität Bielefeld )
- Ruizhi Huang ( 黄瑞芝, AMSS, CAS )
- Dan Isaksen ( Wayne State University )
- Sergei Ivanov ( BIMSA )
- Jacob Kryczka ( BIMSA )
- Ran Liu ( 刘冉, BIMSA-BUAA )
- Xiang Liu ( 刘祥, Nankai University )
- Connor Malin ( University of Notre Dame )
- Morgan Opie ( UCLA )
- Jianzhong Pan ( 潘建中, AMSS, CAS )
- Shaul Ragimov ( Einstein Institute of Mathematics )
- Yichen Tong ( 童浥尘, Kyoto University )
- Andrei Vesnin ( Tomsk State University, Sobolev Institute of Mathematics )
- Felix Wierstra ( University of Amsterdam )
- Kelin Xia ( 夏克林, Nanyang Technological University )
- Zhongjian Zhu ( Wenzhou University )
Jun 19 Mon | Jun 20 Tue | Jun 21 Wed | Jun 22 Thu | Jun 23 Fri | Jun 24 Sat | Jun 25 Sun | |
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08:00-08:50 | M. Opie | H. Adams | |||||
09:00-09:50 | Y. Asao | R. Liu | |||||
10:00-10:50 | E. Farjoun | J. Kryczka | Z. Zhu | ||||
11:00-11:50 | V. Bardakov | R. Huang | Y. Tong | ||||
15:00-15:50 | S. Ivanov | X. Liu | S. Behrens | A. Vesnin | S. Ragimov | ||
16:00-16:50 | A. Grigor'yan | K. Xia | F. Wierstra | S. Barkan | J. Pan | ||
20:00-20:50 | D. Gonçalves | M. Grant | |||||
21:00-21:50 | C. Malin | D. Isaksen |
2023-06-19
08:00-08:50 Morgan Opie ( UCLA ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 Topological vector bundles on complex projective spaces Given two complex topological bundles over |
09:00-09:50 Yasuhiko Asao ( Fukuoka University ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 Toward homotopy theory for magnitude In this talk, we introduce a wide framework for studying magnitude of metric spaces. That is, a theory of categories enriched over filtered sets, which contains all generalized metric spaces and all small categories. We discuss the homology and the Euler characteristic (magnitude) of filtered set enriched categories. Such a homology theory contains category homology, magnitude homology and the path homology. We also give some applications to the digraph theory from this view point. |
15:00-15:50 Sergei Ivanov ( BIMSA ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 Path homology of Cayley digraphs and covering digraphs We develop a theory of covering digraphs, similar to the theory of covering spaces. By applying this theory to Cayley digraphs, we build a ``bridge'' between GLMY-theory and group homology theory, which helps to reduce path homology calculations to group homology with coefficients in certain modules. We show some cases where this approach allows us to fully express path homology in terms of group homology. To illustrate this method, we provide a path homology computation for the Cayley digraph of the additive group of rational numbers. |
16:00-16:50 Alexander Grigor'yan ( Universität Bielefeld ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 We define the notion of a Hodge Laplacian acting on the spaces of |
2023-06-20
08:00-08:50 Henry Adams ( Colorado State University ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 Gromov-Hausdorff distances, Borsuk-Ulam theorems, and Vietoris-Rips complexes The Gromov-Hausdorff distance between two metric spaces is an important tool in geometry, but it is difficult to compute. I will show how to provide new lower bounds on the Gromov-Hausdorff distance between unit spheres of different dimensions by combining Vietoris-Rips complexes with Borsuk-Ulam theorems. This is joint work with Johnathan Bush, Nate Clause, Florian Frick, Mario Gómez, Michael Harrison, R. Amzi Jeffs, Evgeniya Lagoda, Sunhyuk Lim, Facundo Mémoli, Michael Moy, Nikola Sadovek, Matt Superdock, Daniel Vargas, Qingsong Wang, Ling Zhou, available at https://arxiv.org/abs/2301.00246. Many questions remain open! |
09:00-09:50 Ran Liu ( 刘冉 , BIMSA-BUAA ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 Persistent path-spectral based machine learning for protein-ligand binding affinity prediction Molecular descriptors are essential to quantitative structure activity/property relationship (QSAR/QSPR) models and machine learning models. In this talk we will introduce our recently proposed persistent path-spectral (PPS), PPS-based molecular descriptors, and PPS-based machine learning model for the prediction of the protein-ligand binding affinity. For the graph, simplicial complex, and hypergraph representation of molecular structures and interactions, the path-Laplacian can be constructed and the derived path-spectral naturally gives a quantitative description of molecules. Further, by introducing the filtration process of the representation, the persistent path-spectral can be derived, which gives a multiscale characterization of molecules. Molecular descriptors from the persistent path-spectral attributes then are combined with the machine learning model, in particular, the gradient boosting tree, to form our PPS-ML model. We test our model on three most commonly used data sets, i.e., PDBbind-v2007, PDBbind-v2013, and PDBbind-v2016, and our model can achieve competitive results. |
15:00-15:50 Xiang Liu ( 刘祥 , Nankai University ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 Persistent function based machine learning for drug design Artificial intelligence (AI) based drug design has demonstrated great potential to fundamentally change the pharmaceutical industries. However, a key issue in all AI-based drug design models is efficient molecular representation and featurization. Recently,topological data analysis (TDA) has been used for molecular representations and its combination with machine learning models have achieved great success in drug design. In this talk, we will introduce our recently proposed persistent models for molecular representation and featurization. In our persistent models, molecular interactions and structures are characterized by various topological objects, including hypergraph, Dowker complex, Neighborhood complex, Hom-complex. Then mathematical invariants can be calculated to give quantitative featurization of the molecules. By considering a filtration process of the representations, various persistent functions can be constructed from the mathematical invariants of the representations through the filtration process, like the persistent homology and persistent spectral. These persistent functions are used as molecular descriptors for the machine learning models. The state-of-art results can be obtained by these persistent function based machine learning models. |
16:00-16:50 Kelin Xia ( 夏克林 , Nanyang Technological University ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 Mathematical AI for molecular data analysis Artificial intelligence (AI) based molecular data analysis has begun to gain momentum due to the great advancement in experimental data, computational power and learning models. However, a major issue that remains for all AI-based learning models is the efficient molecular representations and featurization. Here we propose advanced mathematics-based molecular representations and featurization (or feature engineering). Molecular structures and their interactions are represented as various simplicial complexes (Rips complex, Neighborhood complex, Dowker complex, and Hom-complex), hypergraphs, and Tor-algebra-based models. Molecular descriptors are systematically generated from various persistent invariants, including persistent homology, persistent Ricci curvature, persistent spectral, and persistent Tor-algebra. These features are combined with machine learning and deep learning models, including random forest, CNN, RNN, GNN, Transformer, BERT, and others. They have demonstrated great advantage over traditional models in drug design and material informatics. |
2023-06-21
10:00-10:50 Emmanuel-Dror Farjoun ( Hebrew University ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 【A3-3-201】 Completion and Terminal Monads We consider the terminal monad among those preserving the objects of a subcategory |
11:00-11:50 Valerii Bardakov ( Sobolev Institute of Mathematics ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 Simplicial structures on braid-like groups During last decades were introduced and intensively studied groups elements of which can be present by braids with special type of crossings. These groups are some analogous of the Artin braid group |
15:00-15:50 Stefan Behrens ( Universität Bielefeld ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 The monopole h-invariants from a topological perspective The monopole h-invariants are numerical invariants of rational homology 3-spheres (i.e. closed, oriented 3-manifolds with vanishing first Betti number) that arise in the context of Seiberg-Witten theory, more specifically monopole Floer homology as defined by Kronheimer and Mrowka. It is an open question whether or not the h-invariants depend on the choice of coefficient ring used to define monopole Floer homology. We use Manolescu's homotopy theoretic approach to Seiberg-Witten theory on 3-manifolds to provide some evidence that the h-invariants depend on the choice of coefficients. We also discuss additivity, duality, and monotonicity properties of the h-invariants for different coefficients. |
16:00-16:50 Felix Wierstra ( University of Amsterdam ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 A recognition principle for iterated suspensions as coalgebras over the little cubes operad In this talk I will discuss a recognitio nprinciple for iterated suspensions as coalgebras over the little cubes operad. This is joint work with Oisín Flynn-Connolly and José Moreno-Fernández. |
2023-06-22
10:00-10:50 Jacob Kryczka ( BIMSA ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 【A3-3-201】 Modern Homotopy Theory and the Geometry of Non-linear Partial Differential Equations Homotopy theory, higher structures and related facets have reshaped many modern areas of mathematics and have provided new techniques for studying old problems. One such area that is beginning to benefit from these homotopical methods is the geometric theory of non-linear partial differential equations. Much like Algebraic analysis and the corresponding D-module theory for linear systems fits naturally into the framework of homological algebra, derived categories etc. it is becoming evident that the analogous non-linear theory fits naturally into the framework of higher algebra, simplicially enriched/infinity-categories etc. In my talk I will describe a functor-of-points approach to non-linear PDEs in the presence of symmetries as they are naturally described by (higher) stacks using the language of derived analytic geometry. |
11:00-11:50 Ruizhi Huang ( 黄瑞芝 , AMSS, CAS ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 Rational homotopy of manifolds from an unstable homotopy theoretic point of view Localization is a foundational method in homotopy theory. It is easy to believe that life is much easier after localization. In particular, integral/unstable homotopy theory should be much more complicated than rational homotopy theory. Indeed, by the famous work of Quillen and Sullivan, rational homotopy theory is purely algebraic. Therefore, one can expect that it is much easier to apply Quillen or Sullivan’s theory to study rational homotopy than to apply the wilder unstable homotopy theory. However, in several recent joint works with Stephen Theriault, we are able to apply unstable homotopy theory techniques to study some rational homotopy properties of manifolds. In this talk, I will explain this with examples, ideas and its advantages. |
15:00-15:50 Andrei Vesnin ( Tomsk State University, Sobolev Institute of Mathematics ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 Invariants of spatial graphs and associated links We will discuss spatial embeddings of graphs into the 3-sphere. Even a graph can be simple combinatorically, its embedding can be very complicated since any cycle of a graph will be embedded as a knot in the 3-sphere. Two spatial graphs are said to be equivalent if there is an ambient isotopy of the 3-sphere which transforms one spatial graph to another. As well as knots and links, spatial graphs can be studied from their diagrams. The Yamada and Jagger polynomials are most useful invariants of spatial graphs. Let |
16:00-16:50 Shaul Barkan ( Einstein Institute of Mathematics ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 Chromatic homotopy is multiplicatively algebraic at large primes Stable homotopy is intimately related to the geometry of formal groups through the Adams-Novikov spectral sequence. Franke took a step towards making this precise by proposing a category of certain sheaves on the moduli stack of formal groups as an algebraic analog of the spectra localized at chromatic height |
20:00-20:50 Daciberg Lima Gonçalves ( Universidade de Sao Paulo,Universidade de Sao Paulo ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 The Borsuk-Ulam property for homotopy classes on certain torus bundles over In this talk we recall some recent results of Borsuk-Ulam type theorems, where these theorems consist in generalizations of the classical Borsuk-Ulam theorem. For the generalizations in consideration, we describe the concept of the Borsuk-Ulam property with respect to the homotopy classes of maps and present a few recent results which consist of such study for maps between two surfaces of Euler characteristic |
21:00-21:50 Connor Malin ( University of Notre Dame ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 Koszul duality and manifold calculus Work of Quillen, Mandell, Behrens-Rezk, and Heuts shows that unstable homotopy theory is strongly tied to the homotopy theory of commutative and Lie algebras. This dual description is a reflection of the Koszul duality between the operads com and lie. Recently, Ching-Salvatore showed the Koszul duality of com and lie can be upgraded to the statement that the sequence of operads |
2023-06-23
10:00-10:50 Zhongjian Zhu ( Wenzhou University ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 An |
11:00-11:50 Yichen Tong ( 童浥尘 , Kyoto University ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 To understand the homotopy type of a space, it is standard to study the homotopy classes of its self-maps. In 2015, Choi and Lee introduced the self-closeness number of a connected CW complex, which is the least integer |
15:00-15:50 Shaul Ragimov ( Einstein Institute of Mathematics ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 Biquandles are Topological Field Theories In the 1980-s Michael Atiyah rigorously defined topological field theory (TFT) with values in |
16:00-16:50 Jianzhong Pan ( 潘建中 , AMSS, CAS ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 I will discuss the proof of a conjecture by Bhattacharya and Ricka on the Stable Picard Group of |
20:00-20:50 Mark Grant ( University of Aberdeen ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 Comparison of equivariant cohomological dimensions We compare three different definitions of the equivariant cohomological dimension of a group with operators, coming from Takasu, Adamson and Bredon relative cohomologies of a subgroup pair, giving examples of strict inequalities in all cases that can occur. We also show that Farber’s topological complexity of a group |
21:00-21:50 Dan Isaksen ( Wayne State University ) 【Zoom 361 038 6975 BIMSA】 The Adams-Novikov spectral sequence for C-motivic modular forms The topological modular forms spectrum tmf serves as an approximation to the sphere spectrum. Because it is computationally simpler than the sphere, tmf serves as a test case for new computational approaches. There are two ways to compute the homotopy groups of tmf: the Adams spectral sequence and the Adams-Novikov spectral sequence. Both approaches have separately been fully analyzed in previous work. We return to the analysis of these spectral sequences, but we add a new perspective. By studying both spectral sequences simultaneously, we are able to simplify the analysis to purely algebraic techniques, with a few exceptions. Along the way, we settle a previously unresolved detail about the multiplicative structure of the homotopy groups of tmf. This is joint work with Hana Jia Kong, Guchuan Li, Yangyang Ruan, and Heyi Zhu. |