Graduate student reading seminar: Difference between revisions
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Tuesday, 2:25pm, B321 Van Vleck | Tuesday, 2:25pm, B321 Van Vleck | ||
3/29, 4/5: Fan Yang | |||
I will talk about the ergodic decomposition theorem (EDT). More specifically, given a compact metric space X and a continuous transformation T on it, the theorem shows that any T-invariant measure on X can be decomposed into a convex combination of ergodic measures. In the first talk I introduced the EDT and some related facts. In the second talk, I will talk about the conditional measures, and prove that the ergodic measures in EDT are indeed the conditional measures. | |||
Revision as of 15:56, 3 April 2016
2016 Spring
Tuesday, 2:25pm, B321 Van Vleck 3/29, 4/5: Fan Yang
I will talk about the ergodic decomposition theorem (EDT). More specifically, given a compact metric space X and a continuous transformation T on it, the theorem shows that any T-invariant measure on X can be decomposed into a convex combination of ergodic measures. In the first talk I introduced the EDT and some related facts. In the second talk, I will talk about the conditional measures, and prove that the ergodic measures in EDT are indeed the conditional measures.
2/16 : Jinsu
Lyapunov function for Markov Processes.
For ODE, we can show stability of the trajectory using Lyapunov functions.
There is an analogy for Markov Processes. I'd like to talk about the existence of stationary distribution with Lyapunov function.
In some cases, it is also possible to show the rate of convergence to the stationary distribution.
2015 Fall
This semester we will focus on tools and methods.
Seminar notes (tex file, bib file)
9/15, 9/22: Elnur
I will talk about large deviation theory and its applications. For the first talk, my plan is to introduce Gartner-Ellis theorem and show a few applications of it to finite state discrete time Markov chains.
9/29, 10/6, 10/13 :Dae Han
10/20, 10/27, 11/3: Jessica
I will first present an overview of concentration of measure and concentration inequalities with a focus on the connection with related topics in analysis and geometry. Then, I will present Log-Sobolev inequalities and their connection to concentration of measure.
11/10, 11/17: Hao Kai
11/24, 12/1, 12/8, 12/15: Chris
2016 Spring:
2/2, 2/9: Louis
2/16, 2/23: Jinsu
3/1, 3/8: Hans
2015 Spring
2/3, 2/10: Scott
An Introduction to Entropy for Random Variables
In these lectures I will introduce entropy for random variables and present some simple, finite state-space, examples to gain some intuition. We will prove the MacMillan Theorem using entropy and the law of large numbers. Then I will introduce relative entropy and prove the Markov Chain Convergence Theorem. Finally I will define entropy for a discrete time process. The lecture notes can be found at http://www.math.wisc.edu/~shottovy/EntropyLecture.pdf.
2/17, 2/24: Dae Han
3/3, 3/10: Hans
3/17, 3/24: In Gun
4/7, 4/14: Jinsu
4/21, 4/28: Chris N.
2014 Fall
9/23: Dave
I will go over Mike Giles’ 2008 paper “Multi-level Monte Carlo path simulation.” This paper introduced a new Monte Carlo method to approximate expectations of SDEs (driven by Brownian motions) that is significantly more efficient than what was the state of the art. This work opened up a whole new field in the numerical analysis of stochastic processes as the basic idea is quite flexible and has found a variety of applications including SDEs driven by Brownian motions, Levy-driven SDEs, SPDEs, and models from biology
9/30: Benedek
A very quick introduction to Stein's method.
I will give a brief introduction to Stein's method, mostly based on the the first couple of sections of the following survey article:
Ross, N. (2011). Fundamentals of Stein’s method. Probability Surveys, 8, 210-293.
The following webpage has a huge collection of resources if you want to go deeper: https://sites.google.com/site/yvikswan/about-stein-s-method
Note that the Midwest Probability Colloquium (http://www.math.northwestern.edu/mwp/) will have a tutorial program on Stein's method this year.
10/7, 10/14: Chris J. An introduction to the (local) martingale problem.
10/21, 10/28: Dae Han
11/4, 11/11: Elnur
11/18, 11/25: Chris N. Free Probability with an emphasis on C* and Von Neumann Algebras
12/2, 12/9: Yun Zhai
2014 Spring
1/28: Greg
2/04, 2/11: Scott
Reflected Brownian motion, Occupation time, and applications.
2/18: Phil-- Examples of structure results in probability theory.
2/25, 3/4: Beth-- Derivative estimation for discrete time Markov chains
3/11, 3/25: Chris J Some classical results on stationary distributions of Markov processes
4/1, 4/8: Chris N
4/15, 4/22: Yu Sun
4/29. 5/6: Diane
2013 Fall
9/24, 10/1: Chris A light introduction to metastability
10/8, Dae Han Majoring multiplicative cascades for directed polymers in random media
10/15, 10/22: no reading seminar
10/29, 11/5: Elnur Limit fluctuations of last passage times
11/12: Yun Helffer-Sj?ostrand representation and Brascamp-Lieb inequality for stochastic interface models
11/19, 11/26: Yu Sun
12/3, 12/10: Jason
2013 Spring
2/13: Elnur
Young diagrams, RSK correspondence, corner growth models, distribution of last passage times.
2/20: Elnur
2/27: Chris
A brief introduction to enlargement of filtration and the Dufresne identity Notes
3/6: Chris
3/13: Dae Han
An introduction to random polymers
3/20: Dae Han
Directed polymers in a random environment: path localization and strong disorder
4/3: Diane
Scale and Speed for honest 1 dimensional diffusions
References:
Rogers & Williams - Diffusions, Markov Processes and Martingales
Ito & McKean - Diffusion Processes and their Sample Paths
Breiman - Probability
http://www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~beresty/Articles/diffusions.pdf
4/10: Diane
4/17: Yun
Introduction to stochastic interface models
4/24: Yun
Dynamics and Gaussian equilibrium sytems
5/1: This reading seminar will be shifted because of a probability seminar.
5/8: Greg, Maso
The Bethe ansatz vs. The Replica Trick. This lecture is an overview of the two approaches. See [1] for a nice overview.
5/15: Greg, Maso
Rigorous use of the replica trick.