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[[Probability | Back to Probability Group]]
[[Probability | Back to Probability Group]]
* '''When''': Thursdays at 2:30 pm
* '''Where''': 901 Van Vleck Hall
* '''Organizers''': Hanbaek Lyu, Tatyana Shcherbyna, David Clancy
* '''To join the probability seminar mailing list:''' email probsem+subscribe@g-groups.wisc.edu.
* '''To subscribe seminar lunch announcements:''' email lunchwithprobsemspeaker+subscribe@g-groups.wisc.edu


[[Past Seminars]]
[[Past Seminars]]


= Spring 2023 =


<b>Thursdays at 2:30 PM either in 901 Van Vleck Hall or on Zoom</b>  
 
= Spring 2025 =
<b>Thursdays at 2:30 PM either in 901 Van Vleck Hall or on Zoom</b>


We usually end for questions at 3:20 PM.
We usually end for questions at 3:20 PM.


[https://uwmadison.zoom.us/j/91828707031?pwd=YUJXMUJkMDlPR0VRdkRCQVJtVndIdz09 ZOOM LINK. Valid only for online seminars.]
== January 23, 2025: ==
No seminar 
 
== January 30, 2025: Promit Ghosal (UChicago) ==
'''Bridging Theory and Practice in Stein Variational Gradient Descent: Gaussian Approximations, Finite-Particle Rates, and Beyond''' 
 
Stein Variational Gradient Descent (SVGD) has emerged as a powerful interacting particle-based algorithm for nonparametric sampling, yet its theoretical properties remain challenging to unravel. This talk delves into two complementary perspectives about SVGD. First, we explore Gaussian-SVGD, a framework that projects SVGD onto the family of Gaussian distributions via a bilinear kernel. We establish rigorous convergence results for both mean-field dynamics and finite-particle systems, demonstrating linear convergence to equilibrium in strongly log-concave settings and unifying recent algorithms for Gaussian variational inference (GVI) under a single framework. Second, we analyze the finite-particle convergence rates of SVGD in Kernelized Stein Discrepancy (KSD) and Wasserstein-2 metrics. Leveraging a novel decomposition of the relative entropy time derivative, we achieve near-optimal rates with polynomial dimensional dependence and extend these results to bilinear-enhanced kernels.  
 
== February 6, 2025: Subhabrata Sen (Harvard) ==
'''Community detection on multi-view networks''' 
 
The community detection problem seeks to recover a latent clustering of vertices from an observed random graph. This problem has attracted significant attention across probability, statistics and computer science, and the fundamental thresholds for community recovery have been characterized in the last decade. Modern applications typically collect more fine-grained information on the units under study. For example, one might measure relations of multiple types among the units, or observe an evolving network over time. In this talk, we will discuss the community detection problem on such ‘multi-view’ networks. We will present some new results on the fundamental thresholds for community detection in these models. Finally, we will introduce algorithms for community detection based on Approximate Message Passing.


If you would like to sign up for the email list to receive seminar announcements then please join [https://groups.google.com/a/g-groups.wisc.edu/forum/#!forum/probsem our group].
This is based on joint work with Xiaodong Yang and Buyu Lin (Harvard University).


== February 13, 2025: Hanbaek Lyu (UW-Madison) ==
'''Large random matrices with given margins''' 


== January 26, 2023, in person: [https://sites.google.com/wisc.edu/evan-sorensen?pli=1 Evan Sorensen] (UW-Madison)   ==
We study large random matrices with i.i.d. entries conditioned to have prescribed row and column sums (margin). This problem has rich connections to relative entropy minimization,  Schr\"{o}dinger bridge, the enumeration of contingency tables, and random graphs with given degree sequences. We show that such a margin-constrained random matrix is sharply concentrated around a certain deterministic matrix, which we call the ''typical table''. Typical tables have dual characterizations: (1) the expectation of the random matrix ensemble with minimum relative entropy from the base model constrained to have the expected target margin, and (2) the expectation of the maximum likelihood model obtained by rank-one exponential tilting of the base model. The structure of the typical table is dictated by two potential functions, which give the maximum likelihood estimates of the tilting parameters. Based on these results, for a sequence of "tame" margins that converges in $L^{1}$ to a limiting continuum margin as the size of the matrix diverges, we show that the sequence of margin-constrained random matrices converges in cut norm to a limiting kernel, which is the $L^{2}$-limit of the corresponding rescaled typical tables. The rate of convergence is controlled by how fast the margins converge in $L^{1}$.  We also propose a generalized Sinkhorn algorithm for computing typical tables and establish its linear convergence. We derive several new results for random contingency tables from our general framework.
'''The stationary horizon as a universal object for KPZ models'''
 
Based on a joint work with Sumit Mukherjee (Columbia) 
The last 5-10 years has seen remarkable progress in constructing the central objects of the KPZ universality class, namely the KPZ fixed point and directed landscape. In this talk, I will discuss a third central object known as the stationary horizon (SH). The SH is a coupling of Brownian motions with drifts, indexed by the real line, and it describes the unique coupled invariant measures for the directed landscape. I will talk about how the SH appears as the scaling limit of several models, including Busemann processes in last-passage percolation and the TASEP speed process. I will also discuss how the SH helps to describe the collection of infinite geodesics in all directions for the directed landscape. Based on joint work with Timo Seppäläinen and Ofer Busani.
 
== February 20, 2025: Mustafa Alper Gunes (Princeton) ==
'''Characteristic Polynomials of Random Matrices, Exchangeable Arrays & Painlevé Equations'''
 
Joint moments of characteristic polynomials of unitary random matrices and their derivatives have gained attention over the last 25 years, partly due to their conjectured relation to the Riemann zeta function. In this talk, we will consider the asymptotics of these moments in the most general setting allowing for derivatives of arbitrary order, generalising previous work that considered only the first derivative. Along the way, we will examine how exchangeable arrays and integrable systems play a crucial role in understanding the statistics of a class of infinite Hermitian random matrices. Based on joint work with Assiotis, Keating and Wei.


== February 2, 2023, in person: [https://mathjinsukim.com/ Jinsu Kim] (POSTECH)   ==
== February 27, 2025: Souvik Dhara (Purdue) ==
'''Fast and slow mixing of continuous-time Markov chains with polynomial rates'''
   
   
Continuous-time Markov chains on infinite positive integer grids with polynomial rates are often used in modeling queuing systems, molecular counts of small-size biological systems, etc. In this talk, we will discuss continuous-time Markov chains that admit either fast or slow mixing behaviors. For a positive recurrent continuous-time Markov chain, the convergence rate to its stationary distribution is typically investigated with the Lyapunov function method and canonical path method. Recently, we discovered examples that do not lend themselves easily to analysis via those two methods but are shown to have either fast mixing or slow mixing with our new technique. The main ideas of the new methodologies are presented in this talk along with their applications to stochastic biochemical reaction network theory.
'''Propagation of Shocks on Networks: Can Local Information Predict Survival?'''


== February 9, 2023, in person: [https://www.math.tamu.edu/~jkuan/ Jeffrey Kuan] (Texas A&M)    ==
Abstract: Complex systems are often fragile, where minor disruptions can cascade into dramatic collapses. Epidemics serve as a prime example of this phenomenon, while the 2008 financial crisis highlights how a domino effect, originating from the small subprime mortgage sector, can trigger global repercussions. The mathematical theory underlying these phenomena is both elegant and foundational, profoundly shaping the field of Network Science since its inception. In this talk, I will present a unifying mathematical model for network fragility and cascading dynamics, and explore its deep connections to the theory of local-weak convergence, pioneered by Benjamini-Schramm and Aldous-Steele.
'''Shift invariance for the multi-species q-TAZRP on the infinite line'''


We prove a shift--invariance for the multi-species q-TAZRP (totally asymmetric zero range process) on the infinite line. Similar-looking results had appeared in works by [Borodin-Gorin-Wheeler] and [Galashin], using integrability, but are on the quadrant. The proof in this talk relies instead on a combinatorial approach, in which the state space is generalized to a poset, and the totally asymmetric process is generalized to a monotone process on a poset. The continuous-time process is decomposed into its discrete embedded Markov chain and its exponential holding times, and the shift-invariance is proved using explicit contour integral formulas. Open problems about multi-species ASEP will be discussed as well.
== March 6, 2025: Alexander Meehan (UW-Madison, Department of Philosophy) ==
'''What conditional probability could (probably) be'''


== February 16, 2023, in person: [http://math.columbia.edu/~milind/ Milind Hegde] (Columbia)    ==
According to orthodox probability theory, when B has probability zero, the conditional probability of A given B can depend on the partition or sub-sigma-field that B is relativized to. This relativization to sub-sigma-fields, a hallmark of Kolmogorov's theory of conditional expectation, is traditionally seen as appropriate in a treatment of conditioning with continuous variables, and it is what allows the theory to preserve Total Disintegrability, a generalization of the Law of Total Probability to uncountable partitions. In this talk, I will argue that although the relativization of conditional probability to sub-sigma-fields has advantages, it also has an underrecognized cost: it leads to puzzles for the treatment of ''iterated conditioning''. I will discuss these puzzles and some possible implications for the foundations of conditional probability.
'''Understanding the upper tail behaviour of the KPZ equation via the tangent method'''


The Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) equation is a canonical non-linear stochastic PDE believed to describe the evolution of a large number of planar stochastic growth models which make up the KPZ universality class. A particularly important observable is the one-point distribution of its analogue of the fundamental solution, which has featured in much of its recent study. However, in spite of significant recent progress relying on explicit formulas, a sharp understanding of its upper tail behaviour has remained out of reach. In this talk we will discuss a geometric approach, related to the tangent method introduced by Colomo-Sportiello and rigorously implemented by Aggarwal for the six-vertex model. The approach utilizes a Gibbs resampling property of the KPZ equation and yields a sharp understanding for a large class of initial data.  
This talk is based on joint work with Snow Zhang (UC Berkeley).  


== February 23, 2023, in person: [https://sites.math.rutgers.edu/~sc2518/ Swee Hong Chan] (Rutgers)   ==
== March 13, 2025: Klara Courteaut (Courant) ==
'''Log-concavity and cross product inequalities in order theory'''
'''The Coulomb gas on a Jordan arc'''


Given a finite poset that is not completely ordered, is it always possible find two elements x and y, such that the probability that x is less than y in the random linear extension of the poset, is bounded away from 0 and 1? Kahn-Saks gave an affirmative answer and showed that this probability falls between 3/11 (0.273) and 8/11 (0.727). The currently best known bound is 0.276 and 0.724 by Brightwell-Felsner-Trotter, and it is believed that the optimal bound should be 1/3 and 2/3, also known as the 1/3-2/3 Conjecture. Most notably, log-concave and cross product inequalities played the central role in deriving both bounds. In this talk we will discuss various generalizations of these results together with related open problems. This talk is joint work with Igor Pak and Greta Panova, and is intended for the general audience.
We study a Coulomb gas on a sufficiently smooth simple arc in the complex plane, at arbitrary positive temperature. We show that as the number of particles tends to infinity, the partition function converges to a quantity involving the partition function of the log-gas on [−1,1] and the Fredholm determinant of the arc-Grunsky operator. Alternatively, we can express this quantity in terms of the Loewner energy of a specific Jordan curve associated with the arc. We also obtain an asymptotic formula for the Laplace transform of linear statistics for sufficiently regular test functions. This shows that the centered empirical measure converges to a Gaussian field with explicit asymptotic mean and asymptotic variance given by the Dirichlet energy of the test function.  


== March 2, 2023, in person: Max Bacharach (UW-Madison)    ==
Based on joint work with Kurt Johansson and Fredrik Viklund. 


== March 9, 2023, in person: [https://math.uchicago.edu/~xuanw/ Xuan Wu] (U. Chicago)   ==
== March 20, 2025: Ewain Gwynne (UChicago) ==
TBD 


== March 23, 2023, in person: Jiaming Xu (UW-Madison)    ==
== March 27, 2025: SPRING BREAK ==
No seminar 


== March 30, 2023, in person: [http://www.math.toronto.edu/balint/ Bálint Virág] (Toronto)   ==
== April 3, 2025: Jimme He (OSU) ==
TBD 


== April 13, 2023, in person: [https://msellke.com/ Mark Sellke] (Amazon)   ==
== April 10, 2025: Evan Sorensen (Columbia) ==
TBD 


== April 20, 2023, in person: [http://www.math.columbia.edu/~remy/ Guillaume Remy] (IAS)    ==
== April 17, 2025: ==
TBD 


== April 27, 2023, in person: [http://www.math.tau.ac.il/~peledron/ Ron Peled] (Tel Aviv/IAS)   ==
== April 24, 2025: William Leep (University of Minnesota, Twin Cities) ==
TBD 


== May 4, 2023, in person: [https://www.asc.ohio-state.edu/sivakoff.2// David Sivakoff] (Ohio State)   ==
== May 1, 2025: Hai-Xiao Wang (UCSD) ==
TBD

Latest revision as of 21:29, 7 March 2025

Back to Probability Group

  • When: Thursdays at 2:30 pm
  • Where: 901 Van Vleck Hall
  • Organizers: Hanbaek Lyu, Tatyana Shcherbyna, David Clancy
  • To join the probability seminar mailing list: email probsem+subscribe@g-groups.wisc.edu.
  • To subscribe seminar lunch announcements: email lunchwithprobsemspeaker+subscribe@g-groups.wisc.edu

Past Seminars


Spring 2025

Thursdays at 2:30 PM either in 901 Van Vleck Hall or on Zoom

We usually end for questions at 3:20 PM.

January 23, 2025:

No seminar

January 30, 2025: Promit Ghosal (UChicago)

Bridging Theory and Practice in Stein Variational Gradient Descent: Gaussian Approximations, Finite-Particle Rates, and Beyond

Stein Variational Gradient Descent (SVGD) has emerged as a powerful interacting particle-based algorithm for nonparametric sampling, yet its theoretical properties remain challenging to unravel. This talk delves into two complementary perspectives about SVGD. First, we explore Gaussian-SVGD, a framework that projects SVGD onto the family of Gaussian distributions via a bilinear kernel. We establish rigorous convergence results for both mean-field dynamics and finite-particle systems, demonstrating linear convergence to equilibrium in strongly log-concave settings and unifying recent algorithms for Gaussian variational inference (GVI) under a single framework. Second, we analyze the finite-particle convergence rates of SVGD in Kernelized Stein Discrepancy (KSD) and Wasserstein-2 metrics. Leveraging a novel decomposition of the relative entropy time derivative, we achieve near-optimal rates with polynomial dimensional dependence and extend these results to bilinear-enhanced kernels.

February 6, 2025: Subhabrata Sen (Harvard)

Community detection on multi-view networks

The community detection problem seeks to recover a latent clustering of vertices from an observed random graph. This problem has attracted significant attention across probability, statistics and computer science, and the fundamental thresholds for community recovery have been characterized in the last decade. Modern applications typically collect more fine-grained information on the units under study. For example, one might measure relations of multiple types among the units, or observe an evolving network over time. In this talk, we will discuss the community detection problem on such ‘multi-view’ networks. We will present some new results on the fundamental thresholds for community detection in these models. Finally, we will introduce algorithms for community detection based on Approximate Message Passing.

This is based on joint work with Xiaodong Yang and Buyu Lin (Harvard University).

February 13, 2025: Hanbaek Lyu (UW-Madison)

Large random matrices with given margins

We study large random matrices with i.i.d. entries conditioned to have prescribed row and column sums (margin). This problem has rich connections to relative entropy minimization,  Schr\"{o}dinger bridge, the enumeration of contingency tables, and random graphs with given degree sequences. We show that such a margin-constrained random matrix is sharply concentrated around a certain deterministic matrix, which we call the typical table. Typical tables have dual characterizations: (1) the expectation of the random matrix ensemble with minimum relative entropy from the base model constrained to have the expected target margin, and (2) the expectation of the maximum likelihood model obtained by rank-one exponential tilting of the base model. The structure of the typical table is dictated by two potential functions, which give the maximum likelihood estimates of the tilting parameters. Based on these results, for a sequence of "tame" margins that converges in $L^{1}$ to a limiting continuum margin as the size of the matrix diverges, we show that the sequence of margin-constrained random matrices converges in cut norm to a limiting kernel, which is the $L^{2}$-limit of the corresponding rescaled typical tables. The rate of convergence is controlled by how fast the margins converge in $L^{1}$.  We also propose a generalized Sinkhorn algorithm for computing typical tables and establish its linear convergence. We derive several new results for random contingency tables from our general framework.

Based on a joint work with Sumit Mukherjee (Columbia)

February 20, 2025: Mustafa Alper Gunes (Princeton)

Characteristic Polynomials of Random Matrices, Exchangeable Arrays & Painlevé Equations

Joint moments of characteristic polynomials of unitary random matrices and their derivatives have gained attention over the last 25 years, partly due to their conjectured relation to the Riemann zeta function. In this talk, we will consider the asymptotics of these moments in the most general setting allowing for derivatives of arbitrary order, generalising previous work that considered only the first derivative. Along the way, we will examine how exchangeable arrays and integrable systems play a crucial role in understanding the statistics of a class of infinite Hermitian random matrices. Based on joint work with Assiotis, Keating and Wei.

February 27, 2025: Souvik Dhara (Purdue)

Propagation of Shocks on Networks: Can Local Information Predict Survival?

Abstract: Complex systems are often fragile, where minor disruptions can cascade into dramatic collapses. Epidemics serve as a prime example of this phenomenon, while the 2008 financial crisis highlights how a domino effect, originating from the small subprime mortgage sector, can trigger global repercussions. The mathematical theory underlying these phenomena is both elegant and foundational, profoundly shaping the field of Network Science since its inception. In this talk, I will present a unifying mathematical model for network fragility and cascading dynamics, and explore its deep connections to the theory of local-weak convergence, pioneered by Benjamini-Schramm and Aldous-Steele.

March 6, 2025: Alexander Meehan (UW-Madison, Department of Philosophy)

What conditional probability could (probably) be

According to orthodox probability theory, when B has probability zero, the conditional probability of A given B can depend on the partition or sub-sigma-field that B is relativized to. This relativization to sub-sigma-fields, a hallmark of Kolmogorov's theory of conditional expectation, is traditionally seen as appropriate in a treatment of conditioning with continuous variables, and it is what allows the theory to preserve Total Disintegrability, a generalization of the Law of Total Probability to uncountable partitions. In this talk, I will argue that although the relativization of conditional probability to sub-sigma-fields has advantages, it also has an underrecognized cost: it leads to puzzles for the treatment of iterated conditioning. I will discuss these puzzles and some possible implications for the foundations of conditional probability.

This talk is based on joint work with Snow Zhang (UC Berkeley).

March 13, 2025: Klara Courteaut (Courant)

The Coulomb gas on a Jordan arc

We study a Coulomb gas on a sufficiently smooth simple arc in the complex plane, at arbitrary positive temperature. We show that as the number of particles tends to infinity, the partition function converges to a quantity involving the partition function of the log-gas on [−1,1] and the Fredholm determinant of the arc-Grunsky operator. Alternatively, we can express this quantity in terms of the Loewner energy of a specific Jordan curve associated with the arc. We also obtain an asymptotic formula for the Laplace transform of linear statistics for sufficiently regular test functions. This shows that the centered empirical measure converges to a Gaussian field with explicit asymptotic mean and asymptotic variance given by the Dirichlet energy of the test function.

Based on joint work with Kurt Johansson and Fredrik Viklund.

March 20, 2025: Ewain Gwynne (UChicago)

TBD

March 27, 2025: SPRING BREAK

No seminar

April 3, 2025: Jimme He (OSU)

TBD

April 10, 2025: Evan Sorensen (Columbia)

TBD

April 17, 2025:

TBD

April 24, 2025: William Leep (University of Minnesota, Twin Cities)

TBD

May 1, 2025: Hai-Xiao Wang (UCSD)

TBD