Views Navigation

Event Views Navigation

Calendar of Events

S Sun

M Mon

T Tue

W Wed

T Thu

F Fri

S Sat

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

1 event,

Stochastics and Statistics Seminar Dejan Slepčev (Carnegie Mellon University)

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

1 event,

Stochastics and Statistics Seminar Gregory Wornell (MIT)

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

1 event,

Stochastics and Statistics Seminar Jingbo Liu (MIT)

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

1 event,

Stochastics and Statistics Seminar Tselil Schramm (Harvard University)

0 events,

Variational problems on random structures and their continuum limits

Dejan Slepčev (Carnegie Mellon University)
E18-304

Abstract: We will discuss variational problems arising in machine learning and their limits as the number of data points goes to infinity. Consider point clouds obtained as random samples of an underlying "ground-truth" measure. Graph representing the point cloud is obtained by assigning weights to edges based on the distance between the points. Many machine…

Find out more »

An Information-Geometric View of Learning in High Dimensions

Gregory Wornell (MIT)
32-155

Abstract: We consider the problem of data feature selection prior to inference task specification, which is central to high-dimensional learning. Introducing natural notions of universality for such problems, we show a local equivalence among them. Our analysis is naturally expressed via information geometry, and represents a conceptually and practically useful learning methodology. The development reveals…

Find out more »

Reverse hypercontractivity beats measure concentration for information theoretic converses

Jingbo Liu (MIT)
E18-304

Abstract: Concentration of measure refers to a collection of tools and results from analysis and probability theory that have been used in many areas of pure and applied mathematics. Arguably, the first data science application of measure concentration (under the name ‘‘blowing-up lemma’’) is the proof of strong converses in multiuser information theory by Ahlswede,…

Find out more »

Efficient Algorithms for the Graph Matching Problem in Correlated Random Graphs

Tselil Schramm (Harvard University)
E18-304

Abstract: The Graph Matching problem is a robust version of the Graph Isomorphism problem: given two not-necessarily-isomorphic graphs, the goal is to find a permutation of the vertices which maximizes the number of common edges. We study a popular average-case variant; we deviate from the common heuristic strategy and give the first quasi-polynomial time algorithm, where previously only sub-exponential time algorithms…

Find out more »


MIT Statistics + Data Science Center
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139-4307
617-253-1764