BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//CMSA - ECPv6.15.20//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-WR-CALNAME:CMSA
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for CMSA
REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H
X-Robots-Tag:noindex
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/New_York
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20230312T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20231105T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20240310T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20241103T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20250309T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20251102T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20260308T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20261101T060000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/New_York
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20240310T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20241103T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20250309T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20251102T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20260308T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20261101T060000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240502T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240502T172000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240415T163546Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240422T153733Z
UID:10003358-1714667400-1714670400@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Symmetry Colloquia  - Global Categorical Symmetries
DESCRIPTION:Symmetry Colloquia – Global Categorical Symmetries \nMay 2\, 2024 \nLocation: Room G-10\, CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge MA 02138 \nSpeaker: Theo Johnson-Freyd\, Dalhousie University and Perimeter Institute \nTitle: The Universal Target Category \nAbstract: Hilbert’s Nullstellensatz says that the complex numbers C satisfy a universal property among all R-algebras: every not-too-large nonzero commutative R-algebra maps to C. Deligne proved a similar statement in categorical dimension 1: every not-too-large symmetric monoidal category over R maps to the category sVec of super vector spaces. In other words\, sVec (and not Vec!) is “algebraically closed”. These statements help explain why quantum field theory requires imaginary numbers and fermions. I will describe the universal symmetric monoidal higher category that extends the sequence C\, sVec\, …. This is joint work in progress with David Reutter\, and builds on closely-related work by GCS collaborators Freed\, Scheimbauer\, and Teleman and Schlank et al.
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/gcs24_johnson-freyd/
LOCATION:CMSA Room G10\, CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event,Symmetry Colloquia
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/Pages-from-2105.15167_Johnson-Freyd.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240529T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240531T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240105T071351Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240624T164905Z
UID:10001120-1716973200-1717174800@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Amplituhedra\, Cluster Algebras\, and Positive Geometry
DESCRIPTION:Amplituhedra\, Cluster Algebras\, and Positive Geometry \nDates: May 29-31\, 2024 \nLocation: Harvard CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge MA 02138 & via Zoom \nIn recent years\, a remarkable paradigm shift has occurred in understanding quantum observables in particle physics and cosmology\, revealing their emergence from underlying novel mathematical objects known as positive geometries. The conference will center on the amplituhedron—the first and major example of a positive geometry. Building on the work of Lusztig and Postnikov on the positive Grassmannian\, the physicists Arkani-Hamed and Trnka introduced the amplituhedron in 2013 as a geometric object that “explains” the so-called BCFW recurrence for scattering amplitudes in N = 4 super Yang Mills theory (SYM). Simultaneously\, cluster algebras\, originally introduced by Fomin and Zelevinsky to study total positivity\, have been revealed to have a crucial role in describing singularities of N = 4 SYM scattering amplitudes. Thus\, one can use ideas from quantum field theory (QFT) to connect cluster algebras to positive geometries\, and in particular to the amplituhedron. Additionally\, QFT can also be used to discover new examples of positive geometries. The conference will bring together a wide range of mathematicians and physicists both to draw new connections within algebraic combinatorics and geometry and to advance our physical understanding of scattering amplitudes and QFT. \nThe conference features: Introductory Lectures\, an Open Problems Forum\, Emerging Scholars Talks\, and talks by experts in the fields. \n  \nConference Videos (Youtube Playlist) \n  \nConfirmed Speakers: \n\nEvgeniya Akhmedova\, Weizmann Institute of Science\nNima Arkani-Hamed\, IAS\nPaolo Benincasa\, MPI\nNick Early\, Weizmann Institute of Science\nCarolina Figueiredo\, Princeton University\nYu-tin Huang\, National Taiwan University\nDani Kaufman\, University of Copenhagen\nChia-Kai Kuo\, National Taiwan University\nThomas Lam\, University of Michigan\nYelena Mandelshtam\, UC Berkeley\nShruti Paranjape\, UC Davis\nLizzie Pratt\, UC Berkeley\nLecheng Ren\, Brown University\nSebastian Seemann\, KU Leuven\nKhrystyna Serhiyenko\, University of Kentucky\nMelissa Sherman-Bennett\, MIT & UC Davis\nMarcus Spradlin\, Brown University\nRan Tessler\, Weizmann Institute of Science\nHugh Thomas\, Université du Québec à Montréal\nJaroslav Trnka\, UC Davis\nAnastasia Volovich\, Brown University\n\nOrganizers: \n\nMatteo Parisi\, Harvard CMSA\nLauren Williams\, Harvard Mathematics\n\nParticipants (PDF) \nThis event is co-funded by the National Science Foundation. \nLimited funding to help defray travel expenses is available for graduate students and recent PhDs. If you are a graduate student or postdoc and would like to apply for support\, please register above and send an email to amplituhedra@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu no later than Friday\, April 19\, 2024. \nPlease include your name\, address\, current status\, university affiliation\, citizenship\, and area of study. F1 visa holders are eligible to apply for support. If you are a graduate student\, please send a brief letter of recommendation from a faculty member to explain the relevance of the conference to your studies or research. If you are a postdoc\, please include a copy of your CV. \n\nSCHEDULE (pdf download) \nWednesday\, May 29\, 2024\n8:30 – 9:00 am\nRegistration and Breakfast \n9:00 – 10:00 am\nJaroslav Trnka\, UC Davis\nTitle: Amplituhedron\nAbstract: I will review basics of the Amplituhedron\, connection to the positive Grassmannian on the mathematical side\, and the scattering amplitudes on the physics side. \n10:00 – 10:15 am\nCoffee Break \n10:15 – 11:15 am\nvia Zoom\nKhrystyna Serhiyenko\, University of Kentucky\nTitle: Introduction to Cluster Algebras\nAbstract: Cluster algebras is a class of commutative rings with an intricate combinatorial structure. They were introduced by Fomin and Zelevinsky in 2002 to study total positivity and canonical basis in Lie Theory\, but quickly evolved into a highly active research area with surprising connections to numerous other areas of mathematics and physics.\nIn this course we will introduce cluster algebras and discuss their basic properties including positivity and Laurent phenomenon. We will also review cluster structures coming from coordinate rings of Grassmannians and the combinatorics of plabic graphs. \n11:15 – 11:30 am\nCoffee Break \n11:30 – 12:30 pm\nThomas Lam\, University of Michigan\nTitle: Introductory Lecture on Positive Geometries\nAbstract: Positive geometries are semialgebraic spaces that appear in the study of scattering amplitudes. Examples include polytopes\, totally nonnegative parts of flag varieties\, and conjecturally\, the amplituhedron. We will give a broad introduction to positive geometries\, and to their canonical forms. \n12:30 – 2:00 pm\nLunch Break \n2:00 – 2:50 pm\nAnastasia Volovich\, Brown University\nTitle: Scattering Amplitudes and Cluster Algebras\nAbstract: I will review some of the deep connections between cluster algebras and the (loop level) scattering amplitudes in N=4 super Yang-Mills theory\, focusing on the cases of n=6 and 7 particles where the corresponding Grassmannian cluster algebras Gr(4\,n) are finite and certain features of the amplitudes are known or believed to be true to all loop order. \n2:50 – 3:00 pm\nCoffee Break \n3:00 – 3:50 pm\nMarcus Spradlin\, Brown University\nTitle: Scattering Amplitudes\, Positive Geometry and the Amplituhedron\nAbstract: I will review the status of (loop level) scattering amplitudes in N=4 super Yang-Mills theory for n>7\, where the corresponding Grassmannian cluster algebras Gr(4\,n) are infinite and novel features emerge\, notably the appearance of certain “marginally positive” algebraic functions of cluster variables. \n3:50 – 4:00 pm\nCoffee Break \n4:00 – 4:30 pm\nCarolina Figueiredo\, Princeton University\nTitle: All-order splits and multi-soft limits for particle and string amplitude\nAbstract: The most important aspects of scattering amplitudes have long been thought to be associated with their poles. Recently a very different sort of “split” factorizations for a wide range of particle and string tree amplitudes have been discovered away from poles. In this talk\, I will explain how natural properties of the binary geometry of the curve integral formulation for scattering amplitudes for Tr$(\Phi^3)$ theory give a simple\, conceptual origin for these splits\, that generalizes them to all orders in the topological expansion. I will also explain how the splits allow us to access and compute loop-integrated multi-soft limits for particle and string amplitudes in Tr$(\Phi^3)$ theory\, the non-linear sigma model and Yang-Mills theory. \n4:30 – 5:15 pm\nYelena Mandelshtam\, UC Berkeley\nTitle: Combinatorics of m=1 Grasstopes\nAbstract: A Grasstope is a linear projection of the totally nonnegative Grassmannian to a smaller Grassmannian. This is a generalization of the amplituhedron\, a geometric object of great importance to calculating scattering amplitudes in physics. The amplituhedron is a Grasstope arising from a totally positive linear map. While amplituhedra are relatively well-studied\, much less is known about general Grasstopes. In this talk\, I will discuss combinatorics and geometry of Grasstopes in the m=1 case. In particular\, I will show that they can be characterized as unions of cells of a hyperplane arrangement satisfying a certain sign variation condition and argue that amplituhedra are (in a certain sense) minimal Grasstopes. This is based on joint work with Dmitrii Pavlov and Lizzie Pratt. \n5:30 – 6:30 pm\nWelcome Reception \n  \nThursday\, May 30\, 2024 \n8:30 – 9:00 am\nBreakfast \n9:00 – 10:00 am\nNima Arkani-Hamed\, IAS\nTitle: Surface Kinematics and THE all-loop integrand for gluon amplitudes \n10:00 – 10:30 am\nCoffee Break \n10:30 – 11:20 am\nHugh Thomas\, Université du Québec à Montréal\nTitle: u-equations from finite dimensional algebras\nAbstract: In this talk\, I will explain how to write down and solve a system of u-equations associated to any finite dimensional algebra with finitely many indecomposable representations. These vastly generalize the system of equations written down by Koba and Nielsen in 1969\, which from our point of view are associated to the representation theory of a Dynkin type A quiver. I will discuss features of the resulting solution spaces\, including connections to tau-tilting theory\, and the relationships that exist among different spaces of solutions. I will also say something about how different choices of finite-dimensional algebra put us in (i) the setting of cluster algebras\, (ii) the Grassmannian combinatorics of non-kissing complexes\, or (iii) the curves-on-surfaces model directly relevant to amplitudes. This talk reports on joint work with Nima Arkani-Hamed\, Hadleigh Frost\, Pierre-Guy Plamondon\, and Giulio Salvatori. \n11:20 – 11:30 am\nCoffee Break \n11:30 – 12:20 pm\nDani Kaufman\, University of Copenhagen\nTitle: Affine Cluster Algebras\nAbstract: Affine cluster algebras form the simplest examples of non-finite type cluster algebras. While they have infinitely many clusters\, they are still mutation finite and have essentially one mutation sequence which produces infinitely many clusters. I will give an introduction to these cluster algebras by comparing them with finite cluster algebras. I will also show how some structures similar to finite type cluster algebras appear “in the limit” along this infinite mutation sequence. If time I will also mention how the “infinite cluster variables” which live in the limit are related to the algebraic letters appearing in the symbol alphabet for 8 particle N=4 SYM amplitudes. \n12:30-12:45 pm\nGroup Photo\, 20 Garden Street\, front entrance stairs outside building \n12:45 – 2:00 pm\nLunch Break \n2:00 – 2:50 pm\nvia Zoom\nRan Tessler\, Weizmann Institute of Science\nTitle: The magic number for the m=2 amplituhedron\nAbstract: We will start by reviewing the amplituhedron and its tilings.\nWe will then show that all tilings of the m=2 amplituhedron have the same cardinality (“the magic number”)\, proving the m=2 case of a conjecture that the same holds for all even-m amplituhedra. If time permits we will discuss related results and consequences.\nBased on a joint work with Parisi\, Sherman-Bennett and Williams. \n2:50 – 3:00 pm\nCoffee Break \n3:00 – 3:50 pm\nMelissa Sherman-Bennett\, MIT & UC Davis\nTitle: Cluster algebras and tilings of amplituhedra\nAbstract: Physicists Arkani-Hamed and Trnka introduced the amplituhedron to better understand scattering amplitudes in N=4 super Yang-Mills theory. The amplituhedron is the image of the totally nonnegative Grassmannian under the “amplituhedron map”. Examples of amplituhedra include cyclic polytopes\, the totally nonnegative Grassmannian itself\, and cyclic hyperplane arrangements. Of primary interest to physics are tilings of amplituhedra\, which are roughly analogous to subdivisions of polytopes. I will discuss joint work with Even-Zohar\, Lakrec\, Parisi\, Tessler and Williams on BCFW tilings of m=4 amplituhedra and the surprising connection between these tilings and the cluster algebra structure of the Grassmannian. \n3:50 – 4:00 pm\nCoffee Break \n4:00 – 5:30 pm\nOpen Problems Forum \n6:00 – 8:00 pm\nConference Dinner (by invitation) \n  \nFriday\, May 31\, 2024 \n8:30 – 9:00 am\nBreakfast \n9:00 – 10:00 am\nYu-tin Huang\, National Taiwan University\nTitle: Chambers and all loop geometry for four-point correlators\nAbstract: The all loop amplituhedron for N=4 SYM (and ABJM theory) can be recast into the notion of loop fibration over tree geometry. This leads to a further dissection of the tree geometry into “chambers”\, whose boundaries represents when the associated loop-form changes. In this talk I will present a new geometry associated with the all loop four-point correlator of N=4 SYM\, where similar description is present. Interestingly\, at four-loops\, this gives a first example where the chamber form is rational even though it’s loop form contains elliptic integrals. \n10:00 – 10:15 am\nCoffee Break \n10:15 – 12:30 am\nEmerging Scholar Talks \n10:15 – 10:40 am\nEvgeniya Akhmedova\, Weizmann Institute of Science\nTitle: The tropical amplituhedron\nAbstract: The Amplituhedron is a geometric object discovered recently by Arkani-Hamed and Trnka\, that provides a completely new direction for calculating scattering amplitudes in quantum field theory. We define a tropical analogue of this object\, the tropicial amplituhedron and study its structure and boundaries. It can be considered as both the tropical limit of the amplituhedron and a generalization of the tropical positive Grassmannian. \n10:40 – 11:10 am\nLizzie Pratt\, UC Berkeley\nTitle: The Chow-Lam Form\nAbstract: The classical Chow form encodes any projective variety by one equation. We introduce the Chow-Lam form for subvarieties of a Grassmannian. By evaluating the Chow-Lam form at twistor coordinates\, we obtain universal projection formulas\, which were pioneered by Thomas Lam for positroid varieties in the study of amplituhedra. This is joint work with Bernd Sturmfels. \n11:10– 11:30 am\nSebastian Seemann\, KU Leuven\nTitle: Vandermonde cells as positive geometries\nAbstract: Vandermonde cells represent semialgebraic subsets of R^n\, characterized as the image of a simplex under the Vandermonde map. However\, within the realm of positive geometry\, several challenges arise in establishing canonical forms for these cells. These include issues such as non-normal boundaries\, non-transversal intersections\, and singularities of boundary curves. Even more difficulties appear when considing the limiting Vandermonde cell\, which is not semi-algebraic and thus doesn’t fit within the standard framework of positive geometries. In this presentation\, I will first review the notion of Polypols and their canonical forms\, examining the complexities encountered when dealing with Vandermonde cells. In particular\, I will explain what goes wrong in the case of Vandermonde cells and which obstructions we can deal with. \n11:30 – 11:40 am\nCoffee break \n11:40 – 12:10 pm\nChia-Kai Kuo\, National Taiwan University\nTitle: Geometric transition from maximal SYM to ABJM\nAbstract: Recently\, the ABJM amplituhedron has been proposed\, encoding all-loop and all-multiplicity ABJM amplitudes. It is constructed by slightly modifying the original definition. In this talk\, I will explore the significance of these modifications in transitioning theoretical models from super Yang-Mills theory to ABJM theory. A key focus will be on how symplectic reduction and the overall sign change in the positivity conditions ensure the consistency of ABJM amplitudes. Additionally\, I will discuss some distinct features of this geometry. \n12:10– 12:30 pm\nLecheng Ren\, Brown University\nTitle: Symbol alphabets from tensor diagrams\nAbstract: We propose to use tensor diagrams and the Fomin-Pylyavskyy conjectures to explore the connection between symbol alphabets of n-particle amplitudes in planar N= 4 Yang-Mills theory and certain polytopes associated to the Grassmannian Gr(4\, n). We show how to assign a web (a planar tensor diagram) to each facet of these polytopes. Webs with no inner loops are associated to cluster variables (rational symbol letters). For webs with a single inner loop we propose and explicitly evaluate an associated web series that contains information about algebraic symbol letters. In this manner we reproduce the results of previous analyses of n ≤ 8\, and find that the polytope C(4\,9) encodes all rational letters\, and all square roots of the algebraic letters\, of known nine-particle amplitudes. \n12:30 – 2:00 pm\nLunch Break \n2:00 – 2:50 pm\nvia Zoom\nPaolo Benincasa\,  MPI\nTitle: Cosmological Polytopes & Beyond\nAbstract: Together with being the source of the most profound questions in fundamental physics\, cosmology turns out to be an arena from where novel combinatorial structures emerge. In this talk\, I will give a gentle introduction to the cosmological polytopes\, describing the so-called Bunch-Davies wavefunction for a large class of scalar theories\, and how it can be used to define and characterize less conventional objects\, named optical polytopes and weighted cosmological polytopes\, which provide examples of non-convex and weighted geometries respectively. \n2:50 – 3:00 pm\nCoffee Break \n3:00 – 3:45 pm\nShruti Paranjape\, UC Davis\nTitle: Loops in a loop expansion\nAbstract: In a paper by Arkani-Hamed\, Henn and Trnka\, it was shown that the amplituhedron construction of N=4 SYM can be recast in terms of negative geometries with a certain hierarchy of loops (closed cycles) in the space of loop momentum twistors. Furthermore\, using differential equation methods\, it was possible to calculate and resum integrated expressions and obtain strong coupling results. In this talk\, we provide a more general framework for the loops of loops expansion and outline a powerful method for the determination of differential forms for higher-order geometries. In particular\, we will focus on the case of 1 closed cycle in loop space and select integrated results. \n3:45 – 4:30 pm\nNick Early\, Weizmann Institute of Science\nTitle: Minimal Kinematics on $\mathcal{M}_{0\,n}$\, and beyond\nAbstract: Minimal Kinematics (MK) identifies kinematic degenerations of the CHY scattering potential where the critical points are given by rational formulas. These rest on the Horn uniformization of Kapranov-Huh; they are specified combinatorially by 2-trees. On the other hand\, Planar Kinematics (PK) identifies the locus in $M_{0\,n}$ which is fixed by cyclic permutation.  Combining MK and PK realizes a maximally thin relative of the associahedron known as the PK polytope; it is a reflexive polytope\, and its polar dual\, the root polytope\, has volume a Catalan number. In this talk\, we start by exploring MK and PK on the moduli space $M_{0\,n}$.  We explain how this story generalizes to moduli spaces $X(k\,n)$ of points in projective space $\mathbb{P}^{k-1}$\, to CEGM amplitudes and beyond. \n4:30 – 5:00 pm\nCoffee and Farewell \n  \n \n  \nAbout the image: \n\nLeft: the 3-dimensional associahedron\, Fomin and Zelevinsky\n\nCenter: artistic depiction of the amplituhedron\, Gilmore\nRight: Schlegel diagram of a hypersimplex\, Ziegler
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/amplituhedra2024/
LOCATION:CMSA Room G10\, CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138\, United States
CATEGORIES:Conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/amplituhedron_cluster-algebras_posgeometry.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240624T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240626T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240415T161428Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241212T160959Z
UID:10003355-1719216000-1719421200@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Workshop on Fibration and Degeneration in Calabi-Yau Geometry
DESCRIPTION:Workshop on Fibration and Degeneration in Calabi-Yau Geometry \nDates: June 24-26\, 2024 \nLocation: Harvard CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge\, MA 02138 \nOrganizer: Chuck Doran\, Harvard CMSA \n\nCalabi-Yau manifolds occupy a central place in geometry. Their critical role as the cut-case between basic Fano building blocks and the zoo of General Type manifolds is key to the wide variety of important applications of Calabi-Yau geometry to theoretical physics. In turn\, ideas from theoretical physics\, such as Mirror Symmetry\, help shape investigations in Calabi-Yau geometry \nThis workshop focuses on a structural feature of Calabi-Yau geometry identified a decade ago by Doran\, Harder\, and Thompson. It is an organizing principle that conjecturally underlies any and all constructions of mirror pairs of Calabi-Yau manifolds. Put simply\, the DHT Mirror Symmetry slogan is: “Degeneration is mirror to fibration.” \n\n\nConfirmed Speakers: \n\nDavid Favero (University of Minnesota)\nAndrew Harder (Lehigh University)\nJesse Huang (University of Alberta)\nMohsen Karkheiran* (University of Alberta)\nMatt Kerr* (Washington University in St. Louis)\nThorsten Schimannek* (Utrecht University)\nMichael Schultz (Virginia Tech)\nAlan Thompson (Loughborough University)\nFenglong You (University of Nottingham & ETH Zurich)\n\n*= via Zoom \n  \nSchedule \nMonday\, June 24\, 2024 \n9:30 – 10:00 am: Breakfast \n10:00 – 11:00 am\nSpeaker: Alan Thompson\, Loughborough University\nTitle: Mirror symmetry for fibrations and degenerations of K3 surfaces\nAbstract: I will describe recent progress\, joint with Luca Giovenzana\, on the DHT problem for K3 surfaces. I will give an lattice-theoretic definition for when a Tyurin degeneration of K3 surfaces and an elliptically-fibred K3 surface\, with an appropriate splitting of the base\, form a mirror pair. I will then explain how this definition is compatible with lattice polarised mirror symmetry for K3 surfaces and with Fano-LG mirror symmetry for (quasi) del Pezzo surfaces. The upshot will be a concrete statement of the DHT conjecture for K3 surfaces. \n12:00 – 1:00: Lunch \n1:00 – 2:00 pm\nSpeaker: David Favero\, University of Minnesota\nTitle: Homotopy Path Algebras and Resolutions\nAbstract: A homotopy path algebra is like a directed version of the group ring on a fundamental group.  One can imagine a directed graph (quiver) embedded in a topological space and considering the path algebra up to homotopy.  Alternatively\, one can think of homotopy classes of directed paths in a stratified topological space.  I will introduce homotopy path algebras and describe their connections to mirror symmetry and resolutions of coherent sheaves on toric varieties. \n3:00 – 4:00 pm\nSpeaker: Andrew Harder\, Lehigh University\nTitle: Tropical Hodge theory for hypersurfaces and Clarke duality\nAbstract: Results of Itenberg\, Katzarkov\, Mikhalkin\, and Zharkov (IKMZ) show that if a projective variety admits a smooth tropicalization\, then there is a collection of sheaves on its tropicalization that can be used to compute its Hodge numbers. However\, smooth tropicalizations fail to exist even in the case of toric hypersurfaces. In work with Sukjoo Lee\, we show that for any toric hypersurface\, an analogue of IKMZ’s result holds. I’ll discuss this sheaf\, and how this allows us to prove that Clarke dual pairs of Landau-Ginzburg models satisfy a particular Hodge number duality. This is a vast generalization of work of Batyrev and Borisov from the 90s. \n4:00 – 4:30 pm: Coffee/Tea \n  \nTuesday\, June 25\, 2024 \n9:30 – 10:00 am: Breakfast \n10:00 – 11:00 am\nSpeaker: Matt Kerr\, Washington University in St. Louis\nTitle: Hypergeometric families and Beilinson’s conjectures\nAbstract: I will describe the construction of motivic cohomology classes on hypergeometric families of Calabi-Yau 3-folds using Hadamard convolutions. These are analogous to elements of the Mordell-Weil group for families of elliptic curves\, and produce solutions to certain inhomogeneous Picard-Fuchs equations. This is part of a joint project with Vasily Golyshev in which we numerically verify Beilinson’s conjectures in some new cases. \n12:00 – 1:00: Lunch \n1:00 – 2:00 pm\nSpeaker: Fenglong You\, University of Nottingham & ETH Zurich\nTitle: Theta functions in mirror symmetry\nAbstract: To obtain a mirror of a Calabi—Yau manifold using Gross—Siebert’s intrinsic mirror symmetry\, one considers a maximally unipotent monodromy degeneration of the Calabi—Yau and take proj of the degree zero part of a relative quantum cohomology ring associated with the degeneration. Theta functions form a canonical basis of the degree zero part of the relative quantum cohomology ring. Theta functions can also be defined in terms of punctured invariants of the broken line type. I will explain a variant of intrinsic mirror symmetry using orbifold invariants\, theta functions for general snc pairs and a relation with the DHT conjecture. \n3:00 – 4:00 pm\nSpeaker: Mohsen Karkheiran\, University of Alberta\nTitle: Emergence of Heterotic-Type II duality from DHT conjecture\nAbstract: The duality between Heterotic and Type IIA strings was conjectured in mid-90’s based on the properties of 4D N=2 field theories and solitonic strings in 6D. Here\, we show that this duality can also emerge from the DHT conjecture. We assume both IIA and IIB strings are compactified over toric Calabi-Yau threefolds which admit K3-fibrations with arbitrary polarizations. Then by applying the Hori-Vafa mirror symmetry to the “pieces” of these Calabi-Yau manifolds\, we will be able to derive the defining data for Heterotic strings. This approach works for any gauge group on the Heterotic side\, and we will show how it can be practically useful to derive the Heterotic dual for any toric Calabi-Yau threefolds in Type IIA or F-theory. \n4:00 – 4:30 pm: Coffee/Tea \n  \nWednesday\, June 26\, 2024 \n9:30 – 10:00 am: Breakfast \n10:00 – 11:00 am\nSpeaker: Thorsten Schimannek\, Utrecht University\nTitle: Enumerative geometry and modularity in two-modulus K3-fibered Calabi-Yau threefolds\nAbstract: Smooth M_m-polarized K3-fibered Calabi-Yau (CY) 3-folds have been classified in [DHNT] and [KT] in terms of the choice of a generalized functional invariant (GFI) and\, in the case m=1\, a generalized homological invariant (GHI). The resulting geometries generally exhibit a small number of complex structure moduli greater or equal to two. I will start my talk by discussing a concrete choice of these invariants that realizes (almost all of) the geometries with exactly two moduli and describe the structure of the corresponding moduli spaces. The corresponding variations of Hodge structure are entirely determined by the regular periods\, for which we obtain a generic expression in terms of m and three integers i\,j\,s. Using the form of this period and Batyrev-Borisov mirror symmetry I will then explicitly construct the corresponding mirror CY 3-folds with two Kaehler moduli and show consistency with the DHT conjecture. In the cases with s=0\, the mirror CY 3-folds are again K3-fibered but with a 2m-polarization. The generic form of the periods allows us to derive generic modular expressions for the A-model topological string free energies and we argue that those are a consequence of a Tyurin degeneration of the GFI with the central fiber being an M_m-polarized K3.\nThe talk is based on work in progress with Charles Doran and Boris Pioline. \n12:00 – 1:00: Lunch \n1:00 – 2:00 pm\nSpeaker: Michael Schultz\, Virginia Tech\nTitle: Mirror Symmetry from Irrationality Proofs and a Proposal for Local Invariants\nAbstract: While Apéry’s original proof of the irrationality of ζ(3) stunned the mathematics community in 1978\, subsequent generations of mathematicians (including a number of those at this workshop) have discovered geometric and modular structures underlying these irrationality proofs that are arguably even more striking. One such well known example are connections to modular pencils of elliptic curves and K3 surfaces and their Picard-Fuchs operators\, which exhibit maximally unipotent monodromy. These objects are respectively mirror dual to anticanonical divisors in certain del Pezzo surfaces and Fano threefolds\, and their Picard-Fuchs operators to the A-side connection on small quantum cohomology for these varieties. Although the Yukawa couplings calculated in classical mirror symmetry for elliptic curves and K3 surfaces are trivial\, I will show in this talk how a blend of the perspectives above allows one to define “virtual” Yukawa couplings for these families that are not trivial. It will be proposed that the utility of this perspective is in computing local invariants related to the mirror\, which recovers some known results in the literature and utilizes connections to work on the DHT conjecture and the twist construction of Doran & Malmendier. \n3:00 – 4:00 pm\nSpeaker: Jesse Huang\, University of Alberta\nTitle: An invitation to global toric mirror symmetry \n4:00 – 4:30 pm: Coffee/Tea \n  \n \n\n 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/fibration/
LOCATION:20 Garden Street\, Cambridge\, MA 02138\, MA\, MA\, 02138\, United States
CATEGORIES:Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/calabi-yau-manifold-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240826T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240828T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240209T180835Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241212T152847Z
UID:10001874-1724662800-1724864400@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Advances in Probability Theory and Interacting Particle Systems
DESCRIPTION:Advances in Probability Theory and Interacting Particle Systems\n\nA conference in honor of S. R. Srinivasa Varadhan.\n\nAugust 26 – August 28\, 2024\n\nHarvard Geological Lecture Hall\n\n\nConference Website: www.math.harvard.edu/event/math-conference-honoring-srinivasa-varadhan\n\nSpeakers\n\n\nInes Armendariz\, Universidad de Buenos Aires\nYuri Bakhtin\, Courant Institute\nGérard Ben Arous\, Courant Institute\nSourav Chatterjee\, Stanford University\nAmir Dembo\, Stanford University\nPeter K. Friz\, TU-Berlin\nNina Holden\, Courant Institute\nJiaoyang Huang\, University of Pennsylvania\nElena Kosygina\, City University of New York\nClaudio Landim\, IMPA\nEyal Lubetzky\, Courant Institute\nChiranjib Mukherjee\, Uni Münster\nStefano Olla\, Université Paris Dauphine\nJeremy Quastel\, University of Toronto\nKavita Ramanan\, Brown University\nAlejandro Ramirez\, NYU Shanghai\nFraydoun Rezakhanlou\, Berkeley\nSunder Sethuraman\, University of Arizona\nScott Sheffield\, MIT\nOfer Zeitouni\, Weizmann Institute\n\nOrganizers: Paul Bourgade (New York University\, Courant Institute) and Horng-Tzer Yau (Harvard University).\n\n\nSponsored by Harvard University Department of Mathematics and the Center of Mathematical Studies and Applications (CMSA).\n\nHarvard University is committed to maintaining a safe and healthy educational and work environment in which no member of the University community is\, on the basis of sex\, sexual orientation\, or gender identity\, excluded from participation in\, denied the benefits of\, or subjected to discrimination in any University program or activity. More information can be found here.
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/advances-in-probability-theory-and-interacting-particle-systems/
LOCATION:Harvard Geological Lecture Hall\, 24 Oxford St\, Cambridge\, 02138\, United States
CATEGORIES:Conference,Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=application/pdf:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/Varadhan-Poster.pdf
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240903T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241101T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240105T033600Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T175957Z
UID:10001112-1725354000-1730480400@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Mathematics and Machine Learning Program
DESCRIPTION:Mathematics and Machine Learning Program \nDates: September 3 – November 1\, 2024 \nLocation: Harvard CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge\, MA 0213 \nMachine learning and AI are increasingly important tools in all fields of research. Recent milestones in machine learning for mathematics include data-driven discovery of theorems in knot theory and representation theory\, the discovery and proof of new singular solutions of the Euler equations\, new counterexamples and lower bounds in graph theory\, and more. Rigorous numerical methods and interactive theorem proving are playing an important part in obtaining these results. Conversely\, much of the spectacular progress in AI has a surprising simplicity at its core. Surely there are remarkable mathematical structures behind this\, yet to be elucidated. \nThe program will begin and end with two week-long workshops\, and will feature focus weeks on number theory\, knot theory\, graph theory\, rigorous numerics in PDE\, and interactive theorem proving\, as well as a course on geometric aspects of deep learning.\n\n  \nSeptember 3–5\, 2024: Opening Workshop: AI for Mathematicians\, with Leon Bottou\, François Charton\, David McAllester\, Adam Wagner and Geordie Williamson.   A series of six lectures covering logic and theorem proving\, AI methods\, theory of machine learning\, two lectures on case studies in math-AI\, and a lecture and discussion on open problems and the ethics of AI in science.\nOpening Workshop Youtube Playlist \n\nSeptember 6–7\, 2024: Big Data Conference \n  \nSeptember 9–13\, 2024: Applying Machine Learning to Math\, with François Charton and Geordie Williamson\nPublic Lecture September 12\, 2024: Geordie Williamson\, University of Sydney: Can AI help with hard mathematics? (Youtube link)\nThe focus of this week will be on practical examples and techniques for the mathematics researcher keen to explore or deepen their use of AI techniques. We will have talks showcasing easily stated problems\, on which machine learning techniques can be employed profitably. These provide excellent toy examples for generating intuition. We will also have expert talks on some of the technical subtleties which arise. There are several instances where the accepted heuristics emerging from the study of large language models (LLM) and image recognition don’t appear to apply on mathematics problems\, and we will try to highlight these subtleties.\nApplying Machine Learning to Math Youtube Playlist \n  \nSeptember 16–20\, 2024: Number theory\, with Drew Sutherland\nThe focus of this week will be on the use of ML as a tool for finding and understanding statistical patterns in number-theoretic datasets\, using the recently discovered (and still largely unexplained) “murmurations” in the distribution of Frobenius traces in families of elliptic curves and other arithmetic L-functions as a motivating example.\nNumber Theory Youtube Playlist \n  \nSeptember 23–27\, 2024: Knot theory\, with Sergei Gukov\nKnot theory is a great source of labeled data that can be synthetically generated. Moreover\, many outstanding problems in knot theory and low-dimensional topology can be formulated as decision and classification tasks\, e.g. “Is the knot 123_45 slice?” or “Can two given Kirby diagrams be related by a sequence of Kirby moves?” During this focus week we will explore various ways in which AI can be applied to problems in knot theory and how\, based on these applications\, mathematical reasoning can advance development of AI algorithms. Another goal will be to develop formal knot theory libraries (e.g. contributions to mathlib) and to apply AI models to formal proof systems\, in particular in the context of knot theory.\nKnot Theory Youtube Playlist \n  \nSeptember 30: Teaching and Machine Learning Panel Discussion\, 3:30-5:30 pm ET \n  \nSeptember 30–October 4\, 2024: Graph theory and combinatorics\, with Adam Wagner\nThis week\, we will consider how machine learning can help us solve problems in combinatorics and graph theory\, broadly interpreted\, in practice. The advantage of these fields is that they deal with finite objects that are simple to set up using computers\, and programs that work for one problem can often be adapted to work for several other related problems as well. Many times\, the best constructions for a problem are easy to interpret\, making it simpler to judge how well a particular algorithm is performing. On the other hand\, there are lots of open conjectures that are simple to state\, for which the best-known constructions are counterintuitive\, making it perhaps more likely that machine learning methods can spot patterns that are difficult to understand otherwise.\nGraph Theory and Combinatorics Youtube Playlist \n  \nOctober 7–11\, 2024: More number theory\, with Drew Sutherland\nThe focus of this week will be on the use of AI as a tool to search for and/or construct interesting or extremal examples in number theory and arithmetic geometry\, using LLM-based genetic algorithms\, generative adversarial networks\, game-theoretic methods\, and heuristic tree pruning as alternatives to conventional local search strategies.\nMore Number Theory Youtube Playlist \n  \nOctober 14 –18\, 2024: Interactive theorem proving\nThis week we will discuss the use of interactive theorem proving systems such as Lean\, Coq and Isabelle in mathematical research\, and AI systems which prove theorems and translate between informal and formal mathematics.\nInteractive Theorem Proving Youtube Playlist \n  \nOctober 21–25\, 2024: Numerical Partial Differential Equations (PDE)\, with Tristan Buckmaster and Javier Gomez-Serrano\nThe focus of this week will be on constructing solutions to partial differential equations and dynamical systems (finite and infinite dimensional) more broadly defined. We will discuss several toy problems and comment on issues like sampling strategies\, optimization algorithms\, ill-posedness\, or convergence. We will also outline strategies about further developing machine-learning findings and turn them into mathematical theorems via computer-assisted approaches.\nNumerical PDEs Youtube Playlist \n  \nOctober 28–Nov. 1\, 2024: Closing Workshop: The closing workshop will provide a forum for discussing the most current research in these areas\, including work in progress and recent results from program participants.\nMath and Machine Learning Closing Workshop Youtube Playlist \n  \nSeptember 3–Nov. 1: Graduate topics in deep learning theory (Boston College) taught by Eli Grigsby\, held at the CMSA Tuesdays and Thursdays 2:30–3:45 pm Eastern Time. Course website (link).\nGraduate Topics in Deep Learning Youtube Playlist \nCourse description: This is a course on geometric aspects of deep learning theory. Broadly speaking\, we’ll investigate the question: How might human-interpretable concepts be expressed in the geometry of their data encodings\, and how does this geometry interact with the computational units and higher-level algebraic structures in various parameterized function classes\, especially neural network classes? During the portion of the course Sep. 3-Nov. 1\, the course will be presented as part of the Math and Machine Learning program at the CMSA in Cambridge. During that portion\, we will focus on the current state of research on mechanistic interpretability of transformers\, the architecture underlying large language models like Chat-GPT. \n\n\n\n\nPrerequisites: This course is targeted to graduate students and advanced undergraduates in mathematics and theoretical computer science. No prior background in machine learning or learning theory will be assumed\, but I will assume a degree of mathematical maturity (at the level of–say—the standard undergraduate math curriculum+ first-year graduate geometry/topology sequence)\n\n\n\n\n\nProgram Organizers \n\nFrancois Charton (Meta AI)\nMichael R. Douglas (Harvard CMSA)\nMichael Freedman (Harvard CMSA)\nFabian Ruehle (Northeastern)\nGeordie Williamson (Univ. of Sydney)\n\n\nProgram Schedule  \nMonday\n10:30–noon\nOpen Discussion\nRoom G10 \n12:00–1:30 pm\nGroup lunch\nCMSA Common Room \nTuesday\n2:30–3:45 pm\nTopics in deep learning theory\nRoom G10 \n4:00–5:00 pm\nOpen Discussion/Tea\nCMSA Common Room \nWednesday\n10:30 am–12:00 pm\nOpen Discussion\nRoom G10 \n2:00–3:00 pm\nNew Technologies in Mathematics Seminar\nRoom G10 \nThursday\n2:30–3:45 pm\nTopics in deep learning theory\nRoom G10 \nFriday\n10:30 am–12:00 pm\nOpen Discussion\nRoom G10 \n\nHarvard CMSA thanks Mistral AI for a generous donation of computing credit.
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/mml2024/
LOCATION:CMSA Room G10\, CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event,Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/Machine-Learning-Program-poster-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240903T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240905T160000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240105T031946Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240918T190637Z
UID:10001110-1725357600-1725552000@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Mathematics and Machine Learning Program Opening Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Mathematics and Machine Learning Program Opening Workshop \nDates: September 3 – 5\, 2024 \nLocation: Room G10\, CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge MA & via Zoom Webinar \nAI for Mathematicians\, with Leon Bottou\, François Charton\, David McAllester\, Adam Wagner\, Boris Hanin\, and Geordie Williamson.  A series of 6 tutorial lectures introducing concepts of AI and of theorem proving\, with many case studies of AI applied to mathematics\, and including lectures and discussion sessions on open questions\, future prospects\, and ethical questions.\n  \nSpeakers \n\nLeon Bottou (Meta AI)\nFrançois Charton (Meta AI)\nMichael R. Douglas (Harvard CMSA)\nBoris Hanin (Princeton)\nDavid McAllester (TTIC)\nAdam Wagner (WPI)\nGeordie Williamson (University of Sydney)\n\nSchedule (link to downloadable pdf) \nVideos from the Opening Workshop (Youtube Link) \n\n\n\nTuesday Sep. 3\, 2024\n\n\n9:30–10:00 am\nMorning refreshments\n\n\n10:00–11:30 am\nMike Douglas: Overview of AI for mathematics\nSlides (pdf)\n\n\n11:30 am–12:00 pm\nDiscussion\n\n\n12:00–1:30 pm\nBreak\n\n\n1:30–2:30 pm\nDavid McAllester: Logic and formal methods\nSlides (pdf)\n\n\n2:30–3:00 pm\nCoffee break\n\n\n3:00–4:00 pm\nPanel Discussion: Automated mathematical discovery\n\n\n\n  \n\n\n\nWednesday Sep. 4\, 2024\n\n\n9:30–10:00 am\nMorning refreshments\n\n\n10:00–11:30 am\nBoris Hanin: Theory of Machine Learning\nSlides (pdf)\n\n\n11:30 am–12:00 pm\nDiscussion\n\n\n12:00–1:30 pm\nBreak\n\n\n1:30–2:30 pm\nAdam Wagner: Case studies I: Reinforcement learning and pattern finding\nSlides (pdf)\n\n\n2:30–3:00 pm\nCoffee break\n\n\n\n  \n\n\n\nThursday Sep. 5\, 2024\n\n\n9:30–10:00 am\nMorning refreshments\n\n\n10:00–11:30 am\nFrançois Charton (slides-pdf)\nand Geordie Williamson: Case studies II\n\n\n11:30 am–12:00 pm\nDiscussion\n\n\n12:00–1:30 pm\nBreak\n\n\n1:30–2:30 pm\nLeon Bottou: Open questions in AI\nSlides (pdf)\n\n\n2:30–3:00 pm\nCoffee break\n\n\n3:00–4:00 pm\nPanel Discussion: How might AI change mathematics?\n\n\n\n  \n  \n 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/mmlworkshop_924/
LOCATION:CMSA Room G10\, CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138\, United States
CATEGORIES:Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/ML_Opening-workshop-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240905T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240905T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240710T192944Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241212T195515Z
UID:10003398-1725552000-1725555600@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:CMSA/Math Fall Gathering
DESCRIPTION:September 5\, 2024 \n4:00 pm \nCMSA Common Room\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge MA \nAll CMSA and Math affiliates are invited.
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/fallgathering2024/
LOCATION:CMSA 20 Garden Street Cambridge\, Massachusetts 02138 United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/CMSA-2-600x338-1-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240906T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240907T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240325T141950Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250415T154033Z
UID:10003287-1725613200-1725728400@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Big Data Conference 2024
DESCRIPTION:  \n \nYoutube Playlist \nOn September 6-7\, 2024\, the CMSA hosted the tenth annual Conference on Big Data. The Big Data Conference features speakers from the Harvard community as well as scholars from across the globe\, with talks focusing on computer science\, statistics\, math and physics\, and economics. \nLocation: Harvard University CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge & via Zoom \n  \nSpeakers: \n\nTianxi Cai\, Harvard Chan School\nRaj Chetty\, Harvard\nBianca Dumitrascu\, Columbia\nBoris Hanin\, Princeton\nPeter Hull\, Brown\nJamie Morgenstern\, U Washington\nKavita Ramanan\, Brown\nNeil Thompson\, MIT\nMelanie Weber\, Harvard\nKun-Hsing Yu\, Harvard Medical School\n\nOrganizers: \n\nRediet Abebe\, Harvard Society of Fellows\nMorgane Austern\, Harvard University Statistics\nMichael R. Douglas\, Harvard CMSA\nYannai Gonczarowski\, Harvard University Economics and Computer Science\nSam Kou\, Harvard University Statistics\n\nSCHEDULE (downloadable pdf) \nFriday\, Sep. 6\, 2024 \n9:00 am: Breakfast \n9:30 am: Introductions \n9:45–10:45 am\nSpeaker: Peter Hull\, Brown University\nTitle: Measuring Discrimination in Multi-Phase Systems\, with an Application to Child Protection\nAbstract: Large racial disparities have been documented in many high-stakes settings—such as employment\, health care\, housing\, and criminal justice—raising concerns of discrimination by individual decision-makers. At the same time\, there is growing understanding that a focus on individual decisions can yield an incomplete view of discrimination; an extensive theoretical literature shows how discrimination can arise and compound across multiple decision-makers in interconnected systems. We develop new empirical tools for studying discrimination in such multi-phase systems and apply them to the setting of foster care placement by child protective services. Leveraging the quasi-random assignment of two sets of decision-makers—initial hotline call screeners and subsequent investigators—we study how unwarranted racial disparities arise and propagate through this system. Using a sample of over 200\,000 maltreatment allegations\, we find that calls involving Black children are 55% more likely to result in foster care placement than calls involving white children with the same potential for future maltreatment in the home. Call screeners account for up to 19% of this unwarranted disparity\, with the remainder due to investigators. Unwarranted disparity is concentrated in cases with potential for future maltreatment\, suggesting that white children may be harmed by “underplacement” in high-risk situations. \n10:45–11:00 am: Break \n11:00 am –12:00 pm\nSpeaker: Jamie Morgenstern\, U Washington\nTitle: What governs predictive disparity in modern machine learning applications?\nAbstract: The deployment of statistical models in impactful environments is far from new—simple correlations have been used to guide decisions throughout the sciences\, health care\, political campaigns\, and in pricing financial instruments and other products for decades. Many such models\, and the decisions they supported\, were known to have different degrees of predictive power for different demographic groups. These differences had numerous sources\, including: limited expressiveness of the statistical models; limited availability of data from marginalized populations; noisier measurements of both features and targets from certain populations; and features with less mutual information about the prediction target for some populations than others.\nModern decision systems which use machine learning are more ubiquitous than ever\, as are their differences in performance for different populations of people. In this talk\, I will discuss some similarities and differences in the sources of differing performance in contemporary ML systems including facial recognition systems and those incorporating generative AI. \n12:00–1:30 pm: Lunch Break \n1:30–2:30 pm\nSpeaker: Kavita Ramanan\, Brown University\nTitle: Understanding High-dimensional Stochastic Dynamics on Realistic Networks\nAbstract: Large collections of randomly evolving particles that interact locally with respect to an underlying network model a variety of phenomena ranging from magnetism\, the spread of diseases\, neural and neuronal networks\, opinion dynamics and load balancing on computer networks. Due to their high-dimensional nature\, these systems are typically intractable to analyze exactly. Classical work\, falling under the rubric of mean-field approximations\, has mostly focused on the case when this interaction graph is dense.  However\, most real-world networks are sparse and often random. We describe a new approach to develop principled approximations for dynamics on realistic networks that beats the curse of dimensionality\, and illustrate its efficacy on a class of epidemiological models. This is based on joint works with Michel Davydov\, Ankan Ganguly and Juniper Cocomello. \n2:30–2:45 pm: Break \n2:45–3:45 pm\nSpeaker: Raj Chetty\, Harvard University\nTitle: The Science of Economic Opportunity: New Insights from Big Data\nAbstract: How can we improve economic opportunities for children growing up in low-income families? This talk will present findings from a recent set of studies that use various sources of big data — ranging from anonymized tax records to social network data — to understand the science of economic opportunity. Among other topics\, the talk will discuss how and why children’s chances of climbing the income ladder vary across neighborhoods\, the drivers of racial disparities in economic mobility\, how highly selective colleges may amplify the persistence of privilege\, and the role of social capital as a driver of upward mobility. The talk will conclude by giving examples of how academic research using big data is informing policy decisions from the local to federal level to expand opportunities for all. \n3:45–4:00 pm: Break \n4:00–5:00 pm\nSpeaker: Neil Thompson\nTitle: How Algorithmic Progress is driving progress in Big Data and AI\nAbstract: Algorithm improvement is one of the purest forms of innovation: it allows the same computational task to be achieved with far fewer resources by proposing clever new ways to do that computation. In this talk\, I will discuss the work that my lab has done tracking and quantifying progress across decades of algorithm research and practice. As I will show\, this algorithmic progress has often outpaced hardware improvement as the most important driver of progress in Big Data and AI. \n  \nSaturday\, Sep. 7\, 2024 \n9:00 am: Breakfast \n9:30 am: Introductions \n9:45–10:45 am\nSpeaker: Tianxi Cai\, Harvard Chan School\nTitle: Crowdsourcing with Multi-institutional EHR to Improve Reliability of Real World Evidence – Opportunities and Challenges\nAbstract: The wide adoption of electronic health records (EHR) systems has led to the availability of large clinical datasets available for discovery research. EHR data\, linked with bio- repository\, is a valuable new source for deriving real-word\, data-driven prediction models of disease risk and progression. Yet\, they also bring analytical difficulties especially when aiming to leverage multi-institutional EHR data. Synthesizing information across healthcare systems is challenging due to heterogeneity and privacy. Statistical challenges also arise due to high dimensionality in the feature space. In this talk\, I’ll discuss analytical approaches for mining EHR data to improve the reliability and generalizability of real world evidence generated from the analyses. These methods will be illustrated using EHR data from Mass General Brigham and Veteran Health Administration. \n10:45–11:00 am: Break \n11:00 am–12:00 pm\nSpeaker: Bianca Dumitrascu\, Columbia Data Science Institute\nTitle: Statistical machine learning for learning representations of embryonic development\nAbstract: During embryonic development\, single cells read in local information from their environments and use this information to move\, divide and specialize. As a result\, the environments themselves change.  However\, it remains unclear how gene expression programs interact with cell morphology and mechanical forces to orchestrate organogenesis in early embryos. Recent advances in single cell techniques and in toto imaging enable unique venues in exploring this link between genomics and biophysics\, which dynamically maps cells to organisms.\nIn this talk\, I will describe statistical machine learning frameworks aimed at understanding how tissue level mechanical and morphometric information impact gene expression patterns in spatio-temporal contexts. We use these tools to understand boundary formation in the early development of mouse embryos and to align data from light sheet recordings of pre-gastrulation development. \n12:00–1:30 pm: Lunch Break \n1:30–2:30 pm\nSpeaker: Melanie Weber\, Harvard Mathematics\nTitle: Data and Model Geometry in Deep Learning\nAbstract: Data with geometric structure is ubiquitous in machine learning. Often such structure arises from fundamental symmetries in the domain\, such as permutation-invariance in graphs and sets\, and translation-invariance in images. In this talk we discuss implications of this structure on the design and complexity of neural networks. Equivariant architectures\, which encode symmetries as inductive bias\, have shown great success in applications with geometric data\, but can suffer from instabilities as their depths increases. We propose a new architecture based on unitary group convolutions\, which allows for deeper networks with less instability. In the second part of the talk we discuss the impact of data and model geometry on the learnability of neural networks. We discuss learnability in several geometric settings\, including equivariant neural networks\, as well as learnability with respect to the geometry of the input data manifold. \n2:30–2:45 pm: Break \n2:45–3:45 pm\nSpeaker: Boris Hanin\, Princeton University\nTitle: Scaling Limits of Neural Networks\nAbstract: Neural networks are often studied analytically through scaling limits: regimes in which taking some structural network parameters (e.g. depth\, width\, number of training datapoints\, and so on) to infinity results in simplified models of learning. I will motivative and discuss recent results using several such approaches. I will emphasize both new theoretical insights into how model\, training data\, and optimizer impact learning and their practical implications for hyperparameter transfer. \n3:45–4:00 pm: Break \n4:00–5:00 pm\nSpeaker: Kun-Hsing Yu\, Harvard Medical School\nTitle: Foundation Models for Real-Time Cancer Diagnosis\nAbstract: Artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming the landscape of medical research and practice. Recent advances in microscopic image digitization\, foundation models\, and scalable computing infrastructure have opened new avenues for AI-enhanced cancer diagnosis. In this talk\, I will highlight recent breakthroughs in multi-modal AI systems for cancer pathology evaluation\, discuss integrative biomedical informatics methods that link cell morphology with molecular profiles\, and outline critical challenges in developing robust medical AI systems. \n  \n\nInformation about the 2023 Big Data Conference can be found here.
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/bigdata_2024/
LOCATION:20 Garden Street\, Cambridge\, MA 02138\, MA\, MA\, 02138\, United States
CATEGORIES:Big Data Conference,Conference,Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/Big-Data-2024_8.5x11-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240912T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240912T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240718T152520Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240919T192322Z
UID:10003400-1726156800-1726160400@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Math and Machine Learning Lecture: Can AI help with hard mathematics?
DESCRIPTION:Math and Machine Learning Lecture \nDate: Thursday\, Sep. 12\, 2024 \nTime: 4:00 – 5:00 pm \nLocation: Science Center & via Zoom Webinar \n  \n \nSpeaker: Geordie Williamson\, University of Sydney \nTitle: Can AI help with hard mathematics? \nAbstract: The last years have seen remarkable advances in what AI can do. It is perhaps surprising that its impact on research in pure mathematics has been modest. Reasoning\, which is so quintessential to the mathematical process\, remains a major challenge for current AI systems. I will survey some exciting recent applications of AI in mathematics research\, trying to highlight what AI can do and the challenges that remain.
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/aimath_91224/
LOCATION:Hybrid
CATEGORIES:Event,MML Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/ML_public-lecture.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240918T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240918T103000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240904T181255Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250328T150446Z
UID:10003442-1726650000-1726655400@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:CMSA/Tsinghua Math-Science Literature Lecture: Marc Lackenby
DESCRIPTION:CMSA/Tsinghua Math-Science Literature Lecture \nDate: Wednesday\, September 18\, 2024 \nTime: 9:00 – 10:30 am ET \nLocation: Via Zoom Webinar \nSpeaker: Marc Lackenby\, University of Oxford \nTitle: The complexity of knots \nAbstract: In his final paper in 1954\, Alan Turing wrote `No systematic method is yet known by which one can tell whether two knots are the same.’ Within the next 20 years\, Wolfgang Haken and Geoffrey Hemion had discovered such a method. However\, the computational complexity of this problem remains unknown. In my talk\, I will give a survey on this area\, that draws on the work of many low-dimensional topologists and geometers. Unfortunately\, the current upper bounds on the computational complexity of the knot equivalence problem remain quite poor. However\, there are some recent results indicating that\, perhaps\, knots are more tractable than they first seem. Specifically\, I will explain a theorem that provides\, for each knot type K\, a polynomial p_K with the property that any two diagrams of K with n_1 and n_2 crossings differ by at most p_K(n_1) + p_K(n_2) Reidemeister moves. \n\nBeginning in Spring 2020\, the CMSA began hosting a lecture series on literature in the mathematical sciences\, with a focus on significant developments in mathematics that have influenced the discipline\, and the lifetime accomplishments of significant scholars.
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/mathscilit2024_ml/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Math Science Literature Lecture Series,Public Lecture,Special Lectures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/Mathlit_Lackenby_8.5x11.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240930T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240930T173000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240912T152420Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250328T150047Z
UID:10003504-1727710200-1727717400@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Machine Learning in Science Education Panel Discussion
DESCRIPTION:Machine Learning in Science Education Panel Discussion\nMonday\, Sep. 30\, 2024\n3:30-5:30 pm ET \nMachine Learning is rapidly influencing many spheres of human activity. As part of the CMSA Mathematics and Machine Learning Program\, this panel discussion will explore current and future uses of Machine Learning in science education. Panelists will make brief presentations\, which will be followed by discussion and audience questions. \nGregory Kestin (Harvard University)\n AI-Supported Activities: Design Principles and Impact on Student Learning \nLogan McCarty (Harvard University)\nSurveying the Landscape: Teaching and Learning with AI \nAlexis Ross (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)\nAdaptive Teaching towards Misconceptions with LLMs \nIlia Sucholutsky (New York University)\n Why should machines have human-like  representations? Towards  student-centric AI tutors \n  \nOrganizers: \n\nDan Freed (Harvard University and CMSA)\nMichael Douglas (CMSA)
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/teachingmachinelearning_93024/
LOCATION:CMSA Room G10\, CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event,MML Meeting,Special Lectures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/ML_9.30.24_Machine-Learning-in-Science-Education.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241016T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241016T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240927T150643Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250328T150459Z
UID:10002915-1729094400-1729098000@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Math Science Lectures in Honor of Raoul Bott: Andrew Neitzke
DESCRIPTION:  \nSpeaker: Andrew Neitzke\, Yale University \nLocation: Harvard University Science Center Hall D & via Zoom webinar \nDates: October 16 & 17\, 2024 \nTime: 4:00 pm \n  \n \nWednesday\, Oct. 16\, 2024 \nTitle: Abelianization in analysis of ODEs \nAbstract: I will describe the exact WKB method for asymptotic analysis of families of ODEs in one variable\, and its interpretation as a kind of abelianization procedure\, which replaces GL(N)-connections over a Riemann surface by GL(1)-connections over an N-fold branched cover. This abelianization procedure connects exact WKB to various subjects in geometry (cluster algebras\, moduli of Higgs bundles\, enumerative geometry). One application is a conjectural description of Hitchin’s hyperkahler metric on the moduli of Higgs bundles; I will review some recent progress on these conjectures. \n  \n \nThursday\, Oct. 17\, 2024 \nTitle: Abelianization in quantum topology \nAbstract: I will describe new applications of abelianization to various related subjects: perturbative Chern-Simons invariants\, skein algebras\, and conformal blocks. The aim is to explain how abelianization gives a unifying perspective on constructions familiar in each of these subjects (e.g. dilogarithmic formulas for Chern-Simons invariants\, vertex models for computing quantum invariants of links\, and iterated-fusion constructions of conformal blocks for the Virasoro algebra)\, and also suggests various extensions\, which are just beginning to be explored. \n  \n\nRaoul Bott (9/24/1923 – 12/20/2005) is known for the Bott periodicity theorem\, the Morse–Bott functions\, and the Borel–Bott–Weil theorem. 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/mathscibott_1024/
LOCATION:Harvard Science Center\, 1 Oxford Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138
CATEGORIES:Event,Math Science Lectures in Honor of Raoul Bott,Public Lecture,Special Lectures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/Bott-Lecture_Neitzke_11x17.1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241017T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241017T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240927T150813Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250409T192551Z
UID:10002916-1729180800-1729184400@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Math Science Lectures in Honor of Raoul Bott: Andrew Neitzke
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Andrew Neitzke\, Yale University \nLocation: Harvard University Science Center Hall D & via Zoom webinar \nDates: October 16 & 17\, 2024 \nTime: 4:00 pm \n  \n \nWednesday\, Oct. 16\, 2024 \nTitle: Abelianization in analysis of ODEs \nAbstract: I will describe the exact WKB method for asymptotic analysis of families of ODEs in one variable\, and its interpretation as a kind of abelianization procedure\, which replaces GL(N)-connections over a Riemann surface by GL(1)-connections over an N-fold branched cover. This abelianization procedure connects exact WKB to various subjects in geometry (cluster algebras\, moduli of Higgs bundles\, enumerative geometry). One application is a conjectural description of Hitchin’s hyperkahler metric on the moduli of Higgs bundles; I will review some recent progress on these conjectures. \n  \n \nThursday\, Oct. 17\, 2024 \nTitle: Abelianization in quantum topology \nAbstract: I will describe new applications of abelianization to various related subjects: perturbative Chern-Simons invariants\, skein algebras\, and conformal blocks. The aim is to explain how abelianization gives a unifying perspective on constructions familiar in each of these subjects (e.g. dilogarithmic formulas for Chern-Simons invariants\, vertex models for computing quantum invariants of links\, and iterated-fusion constructions of conformal blocks for the Virasoro algebra)\, and also suggests various extensions\, which are just beginning to be explored. \n\n  \nRaoul Bott (9/24/1923 – 12/20/2005) is known for the Bott periodicity theorem\, the Morse–Bott functions\, and the Borel–Bott–Weil theorem. 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/mathscibott_1024-2/
LOCATION:Harvard Science Center\, 1 Oxford Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138
CATEGORIES:Event,Math Science Lectures in Honor of Raoul Bott,Public Lecture,Special Lectures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/Bott-Lecture_Neitzke_11x17.1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241028T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241030T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240105T032648Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241106T191859Z
UID:10001111-1730106000-1730307600@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Mathematics and Machine Learning Closing Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Mathematics and Machine Learning Closing Workshop \nDates: October 28 – Oct. 30\, 2024 \nLocation: Room G10\, CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge MA \nThe closing workshop will provide a forum for discussing the most current research in these areas\, including work in progress and recent results from program participants. We will devote one day to frontier topics in interactive theorem proving\, such as mathematical library development and AI for mathematical search and theorem proving. \n  \nYoutube Playlist \n \nOrganizers \n\nFrancois Charton (Meta AI)\nMichael R. Douglas (Harvard CMSA)\nMichael Freedman (Harvard CMSA)\nFabian Ruehle (Northeastern)\nGeordie Williamson (Univ. of Sydney)\n\nSpeakers \n\nAnkit Anand\, Google Deepmind Montreal\nJeremy Avigad\, Carnegie Mellon University\nAngelica Babei\nMatej Balog\, Deepmind\nGergely Bérczi\, Aarhus University\nTristan Buckmaster\, New York University\nGiorgi Butbaia\, University of New Hampshire\nEdgar Costa\, MIT\nAlex Davies\, DeepMind\nBin Dong\, Beijing International Center for Mathematical Research\nKit Fraser-Taliente\, University of Oxford\nJavier Gomez-Serrano\, Brown University\nJim Halverson\, Northeastern University\nThomas Harvey\, MIT\nAmaury Hayat\, Ecole des Ponts Paristech\nYang-Hui He\, City University of London\nJürgen Jost\, Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences\nPetros Koumoutsakos\, Harvard University\nKyu-Hwan Lee\, University of Connecticut\nDavid Lowry-Duda\, ICERM\nStephane Mallat\, Flatiron/College de France\nAbbas Mehrabian\, Google Deepmind Montreal\nCengiz Pehlevan\, Harvard University\nFabian Ruehle\, Northeastern University\nEric Vanden-Eijnden\, Courant/NYU\nAdam Wagner\, Worcester Polytechnic Institute\nMelanie Matchett Wood\, Harvard University\n\n  \nSchedule (download PDF) \nMonday Oct. 28\, 2024 \n9:00–9:30 amMorning refreshments \n9:30–9:45 amIntroductions \n9:45–10:45 amJürgen Jost\, Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences \nTitle: Data visualization with category theory and geometry \nAbstract: While data often come in a high-dimensional feature space\, they typically exhibit intrinsic constraints and regularities\, and they can therefore often be represented on a lower-dimensional\, but possibly highly curved Riemannian manifold. Still\, for visualization purposes\, that dimension still needs to be lowered to 2 or 3. We present the mathematical foundations for such schemes\, in particular UMAP\, and describe an improved such method. \n10:45–11:00 amBreak \n11:00 am–12:00 pmAnkit Anand\, Google Deepmind Montreal\, Abbas Mehrabian\, Google Deepmind Montreal \nTitle: From Theorem Proving to Disproving: Modern machine learning versus classical heuristic search in automated theorem proving and extremal graph theory \nAbstract: Machine learning is widely believed to outperform classical methods\, but this is not always the case. Firstly\, we describe how we adapted the idea of hindsight experience replay from reinforcement learning to the automated theorem proving domain\, so as to use the intermediate data generated during unsuccessful proofs. We show that provers trained in this way can outperform previous machine learning approaches and compete with the state-of-the-art heuristic-based theorem prover E in its best configuration\, on the popular benchmarks MPTP2078\, M2k and Mizar40. The proofs generated by our algorithm are also almost always significantly shorter than E’s proofs. Based on this paper\, which was presented at ICML 2022: https://proceedings.mlr.press/v162/aygun22a.html. Secondly\, we study a central extremal graph theory problem inspired by a 1975 conjecture of Erdős\, which aims to find graphs with a given size (number of nodes) that maximize the number of edges without having 3- or 4-cycles. We formulate this problem as a sequential decision-making problem and compare AlphaZero\, a neural network-guided tree search\, with tabu search\, a heuristic local search method. Using either method\, by introducing a curriculum—jump-starting the search for larger graphs using good graphs found at smaller sizes—we improve the state-of-the-art lower bounds for several sizes. Joint work with Tudor Berariu\, Joonkyung Lee\, Anurag Murty Naredla\, Adam Zsolt Wagner\, and other colleagues at Google DeepMind. Based on this paper\, which was presented at IJCAI 2024: https://arxiv.org/abs/2311.03583. \n12:00–1:30 pmLunch Break \n1:30–2:30 pmFabian Ruehle\, Northeastern University\, Giorgi Butbaia\, University of New Hampshire \nTitle: Rigorous results  from ML using RL \nAbstract: We explain how to use Reinforcement Learning in Mathematics to obtain provably correct results. After a brief introduction to Reinforcement Learning\, I will illustrate the idea using an example from Number Theory\, where we solve a Diophantine Equation related to String Theory\, and two from Knot Theory. The first knot theory problem is to identify unknots\, while the second is concerned with identifying so-called ribbon knots. The latter play an important role in the search for counter-examples to the smooth Poincare conjecture. \n2:30–2:45 pmBreak \n2:45–3:45 pmCengiz Pehlevan\, Harvard University \nTitle: Solvable Models of Scaling and Emergence in Deep Learning \n3:45–4:00 pmBreak \n4:00–4:30 pmMatej Balog\, Deepmindvia Zoom \nTitle: FunSearch: Mathematical discoveries from program search with large language models \nAbstract: Large language models (LLMs) have demonstrated tremendous capabilities in solving complex tasks\, from quantitative reasoning to understanding natural language. However\, LLMs sometimes suffer from confabulations (or hallucinations)\, which can result in them making plausible but incorrect statements. This hinders the use of current large models in scientific discovery. We introduce FunSearch (short for searching in the function space)\, an evolutionary procedure based on pairing a pretrained LLM with a systematic evaluator. We demonstrate the effectiveness of this approach to surpass the best-known results in important problems\, pushing the boundary of existing LLM-based approaches. Applying FunSearch to a central problem in extremal combinatorics—the cap set problem—we discover new constructions of large cap sets going beyond the best-known ones\, both in finite dimensional and asymptotic cases. This shows that it is possible to make discoveries for established open problems using LLMs. We showcase the generality of FunSearch by applying it to an algorithmic problem\, online bin packing\, finding new heuristics that improve on widely used baselines. In contrast to most computer search approaches\, FunSearch searches for programs that describe how to solve a problem\, rather than what the solution is. Beyond being an effective and scalable strategy\, discovered programs tend to be more interpretable than raw solutions\, enabling feedback loops between domain experts and FunSearch\, and the deployment of such programs in real-world applications. \n4:30–5:00 pmEdgar Costa\, MIT \nTitle: Machine learning L-functions \nAbstract: We report on multiple experiments related to L-functions data. L-functions are complex functions that encode significant information about number theory and algebraic geometry\, playing a crucial part in the Langlands program\, a foundational set of conjectures connecting number theory with other mathematical domains. We focused on two L-function datasets. The first includes about 250k rational L-functions of small arithmetic complexity with diverse origins. Multiple dimensionality reduction techniques were used to analyze invariants and behavioral trends\, focusing on how differing origins impact the results. The second dataset is composed of L-functions associated with Maass forms. Although these L-functions are non-rational\, they also share the low arithmetic complexity of the first dataset. The crux of our investigation here is determining whether this set manifests similar characteristics to the first one. Based on this exploration\, we propose a simple heuristic method to deduce their Fricke sign\, an unknown invariant for 40% of the data. This is joint work with: Joanna Biere\, Giorgi Butbaia\, Alyson Deines\, Kyu-Hwan Lee\, David Lowry-Duda\, Tom Oliver\, Tamara Veenstra\, and Yidi Qi. \n  \n  \nTuesday Oct. 29\, 2024  \n9:15–9:45 amMorning refreshments \n9:45–10:45 amYang-Hui He\, London Institute for Mathematical Sciences Via Zoom \nTitle: AI assisted mathematics \nAbstract: We argue how AI can assist mathematics in three ways: theorem-proving\, conjecture formulation\, and language processing. Inspired by initial experiments in geometry and string theory in 2017\, we summarize how this emerging field has grown over the past years\, and show how various machine-learning algorithms can help with pattern detection across disciplines ranging from algebraic geometry to representation theory\, to combinatorics\, and to number theory.  At the heart of the program is the question how does AI help with theoretical discovery\, and the implications for the future of mathematics. \n10:45–11:00 amBreak \n11:00 –11:30Angelica Babei \nTitle: Learning Euler factors of elliptic curves with transformers \nAbstract: The L-function of an elliptic curve is at the core of the BSD conjecture\, and its Euler factors encode important arithmetic information about the curve. For example\, understanding these Euler factors using machine learning techniques has recently led to discovering the phenomenon of murmurations. In this talk\, we present some results on learning Euler factors based on 1. other nearby factors\, and 2. the Weierstrass equation of the curve.  \n11:30–12:00 pmDavid Lowry-Duda\, ICERM \nTitle: Exploring patterns in number theory with deep learning: a case study with the Möbius and squarefree indicator functionsAbstract: We report on experiments using neural networks and Int2Int\, the integer sequence to integer sequence transformer made by François Charton for this CMSA program. We initially study the Möbius function. This function appears as the coefficients of the reciprocal of the Riemann zeta function and is famously hard to understand. Predicting the Möbius function is closely related to predicting the squarefree indicator function\, leading us to perform similar experiments there. Finally\, we’ll discuss how varying the input representation and model affects the strength of the predictions and allows us to explain most (but not all) of the predictive strength and behavior. \n12:00–1:30 pmLunch \n1:30–2:30 pmAmaury Hayat\, Ecole des Ponts Paristech\, Melanie Matchett Wood\, Harvard University\, Alex Davies\, DeepMind\, Jeremy Avigad\, Carnegie Mellon University \nTitle: Machine learning and theorem proving \nAbstract: Recent successes in machine learning have raised hopes that neural networks could one day assist mathematicians in proving theorems. This raises the question of an appropriate setting to apply machine learning methods to theorem proving. Formal languages\, such as Lean\, provide automatic verification of mathematical proofs and thus offer a natural environment. Nevertheless\, some challenges emerge\, particularly because these languages are often designed to verify correctness rather than find a solution\, while mathematicians often perform reasoning steps to do both at the same time. This talk will present recent applications of machine learning methods to theorem proving in Lean\, highlight current challenges\, and explore what these developments might mean for the future of mathematics. \n  \n2:30–2:45 pmBreak \n2:45–3:45 pmAdam Wagner\, Worcester Polytechnic Institute\, Kit Fraser-Taliente\, University of Oxford\, Gergely Bérczi\, Aarhus University\, Thomas Harvey\, MIT \nTitle: Sparse subgraphs of the d-cube with diameter d \nAbstract: Erdos et al studied spanning subgraphs of the $d$-cube which have the same diameter $d$ as the cube itself. They asked the following natural question: what is the maximum number of edges one can delete from the $d$-dimensional hypercube\, without increasing its diameter? We will discuss how we can use PatternBoost\, a simple machine learning algorithm that alternates local and global optimization steps\, to find good constructions for this problem \n3:45–4:00 pmBreak \n4:00–4:30 pmPetros Koumoutsakos\, Harvard University \n4:30–5:00 pm \nStéphane Mallat\,  Flatiron/College de France \nTitle: Image Generation by Score Diffusion and the Renormalisation Group \nAbstract: Score based diffusions generate impressive models of images\, sounds and complex physical systems. Are they generalising or memorising? How can deep network estimate high-dimensional scores without curse of dimensionality? This talk shows that generalisation does occur for deep network estimation of scores\, with enough training data.  The ability to avoid the curse of dimensionality seems to rely on multiscale properties revealed by a renormalisation group decomposition coming from statistical physics. Applications to models of turbulences will be introduced and discussed. \n  \nWednesday Oct. 30\, 2024 \n9:15–9:45 amMorning refreshments \n9:45–10:45 amBin Dong\, Beijing International Center for Mathematical Research(via Zoom)  \nTitle: AI for Mathematics: From Digitization to Intelligentization \nAbstract: This presentation explores the synergistic relationship between AI and mathematics\, beginning with a brief historical overview of their mutually beneficial interactions. It then examines notable existing work in AI for mathematics\, highlighting their achievements and limitations.  Next\, I will share preliminary findings from the ongoing AI4M research project at Peking University\, including our work on creating high-quality mathematical datasets through formalization (digitization)\, and our future plans for developing intelligent applications using these datasets. The presentation concludes with a forward-looking perspective on the opportunities and challenges within this exciting interdisciplinary field. \n10:45–11:00 am Break \n11:00 am–12:00 pm Eric Vanden-Eijnden\, Courant/NYUvia Zoom \nTitle: Generative modeling with flows and diffusions\, with applications to scientific computing. \nAbstract: Generative models based on dynamical transport have recently led to significant advances in unsupervised learning. At mathematical level\, these models are primarily designed around the construction of a map between two probability distributions that transform samples from the first into samples from the second.  While these methods were first introduced in the context of image generation\, they have found a wide range of applications\, including in scientific computing where they offer interesting ways to reconsider complex problems once thought intractable because of the curse of dimensionality. In this talk\, I will discuss the mathematical underpinning of generative models based on flows and diffusions\, and show how a better understanding of their inner workings can help improve their design. These results indicate how to structure the transport to best reach complex target distributions while maintaining computational efficiency\, both at learning and sampling stages.  I will also discuss applications of generative AI in scientific computing\, in particular in the context of application with models and no data (as opposed to the more standard data andno model)\, such as Monte Carlo sampling\, with applications to the statistical mechanics and Bayesian inference\, as well as the numerical integration and interpretation of random dynamical systems driven out of equilibrium. \n12:00–1:30 pm Lunch \n1:30–2:30 pm Kyu-Hwan Lee\, University of Connecticut \nTitle: Discovering New Mathematical Structures with Machine Learning \nAbstract: Can machine learning help discover new mathematical structures? In this talk\, I will present two case studies: murmurations in number theory and loadings of partitions related to Kronecker coefficients in representation theory and combinatorics. The focus will be on the paradigm of examining mathematical objects collectively\, rather than individually\, to create datasets suitable for machine learning experiments and interpretations. \n2:30–2:45 pm Break \n2:45–3:45 pm James Halverson\, Northeastern University \nTitle: Learning the Topological Invariance of Knots \nAbstract: This talk focuses on using machine learning for the defining problem in knot theory\, the classification of knots up to ambient space isotopy. We will train transformers and convolutional neural networks to distinguish topologically inequivalent knots\, given only representatives of the classes and no a priori knowledge of topological invariants. In this scheme\, we find that equivalent knots are well-clustered in the embedding space of the neural network\, and a trained decoder maps effectively from the embedding space back to knot space. Preliminary results will be presented on a new approach to resolving the Jones unknot conjecture. \n3:45–4:00 pmBreak \n4:00–5:00 pm Tristan Buckmaster\, New York University\, Javier Gomez-Serrano\, Brown Universityvia Zoom \n  \n  \nImage by Sue Side. https://www.sueside.com/\n 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/mmlworkshop_1024/
LOCATION:CMSA Room G10\, CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138\, United States
CATEGORIES:Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/ML_Closing-workshop_v3-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241121T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241121T103000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240923T152934Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241203T144846Z
UID:10003528-1732179600-1732185000@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:CMSA/Tsinghua Math-Science Literature Lecture: Bjorn Poonen\, MIT
DESCRIPTION:CMSA/Tsinghua Math-Science Literature Lecture \nDate: November 21\, 2024 \nTime: 9:00 – 10:30 am ET \nLocation: CMSA G10\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge MA & via Zoom \nSpeaker: Bjorn Poonen\, MIT \nTitle: Ranks of elliptic curves \nAbstract: Elliptic curves are simplest varieties whose rational points are not fully understood\, and they are the simplest projective varieties with a nontrivial group structure.  In 1922 Mordell proved that the group of rational points on an elliptic curve is finitely generated.  We will survey what is known and what is believed about this group. \n  \n\nBeginning in Spring 2020\, the CMSA began hosting a lecture series on literature in the mathematical sciences\, with a focus on significant developments in mathematics that have influenced the discipline\, and the lifetime accomplishments of significant scholars.
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/mathscilit2024_bp/
LOCATION:CMSA Room G10\, CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138\, United States
CATEGORIES:Math Science Literature Lecture Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/Mathlit_Poonen_11x17.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250121T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250124T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240710T140404Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250213T211311Z
UID:10003397-1737450000-1737738000@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Workshop on Symmetries and Gravity
DESCRIPTION:Workshop on Symmetries and Gravity \nDates: January 21-24\, 2025 \nLocation: Harvard CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge\, MA 02138 \nOrganizers: Ibrahima Bah (Johns Hopkins University)\, Patrick Jefferson (Johns Hopkins University)\, Yiming Chen (Stanford University) \nDescription: There is a widespread belief\, that has its origins in work from the 70s\, that a theory of quantum gravity cannot admit global symmetries. Traditionally\, this was seen only as a qualitative statement about ordinary symmetries\, but there have since been a number of developments that have both widened its scope and sharpened its implications. Recent work has greatly broadened the definition of global symmetries\, and characterizes them in terms of topological operators in quantum systems. Concurrently\, insights from quantum gravity have suggested ways to quantify the extent of global symmetry violation. Additionally\, advances in the swampland program\, along with amplitudes and bootstrap techniques\, have shown ways to turn high-energy statements into constraints on low-energy effective field theories. In string theory\, there are more concrete statements on charge violation in gravity\, with proofs in limited context. In general\, however\, “no global symmetries in quantum gravity” continues to be an open conjecture with broad implications on the nature of quantum gravity and low-energy effective field theory. The main goal of the meeting is to bring together experts in the various arenas of research above\, to reassess and develop new strategies for making progress on this long-standing open problem. Some objectives include understanding the violation of various generalized and categorical symmetries in gravity more cohesively\, and putting concrete bounds on global charge-violating amplitudes at low energies. \nPartially funded by the Simons Collaboration on Global Categorical Symmetries. \n  \nConfirmed Participants \n\nTom Banks\, Rutgers\nFederico Bonetti\, Durham University\nChristian Copetti\, Oxford\nHector Parra De Freitas\, Harvard\nDamian van de Heisteeg\, Harvard CMSA\nMatilda Delgado\, IFT\nMichele Del-Zotto\, Uppsala University\nMuldrow Etheredge\, UMass Amherst\nIñaki Garcia-Etxebarria\, Durham University\nEduardo Garcia-Valdecasas\, SISSA\, Trieste\nNaomi Gendler\, Harvard\nKelian Haring\, CERN\nDaniel Harlow\, MIT\nJonathan Heckman\, University of Pennsylvania\nBen Heidenreich\, UMass Amherst\nAidan Herderschee\, IAS\nMax Huebner\, Uppsala University\nJesús Huertas\, Instituto de Física Teórica\nTheo Johnson-Freyd\, Dalhousie University\nHo Tat Lam\, MIT\nAdam Levine\, MIT\nYue-Zhou Li\, Princeton\nJacob McNamara\, Caltech\nRuben Minasian\, Institute of Theoretical Physics Saclay\nAmineh Mohseni\, Harvard\nMiguel Montero\, IFT\nGregory Moore\, Rutgers\nLeonardo Rastelli\, Stony Brook\nMatt Reece\, Harvard University\nGrant Remmen\, New York University\nDiego Rodriguez-Gomez\, University of Oviedo\nKonstantinos Roumpedakis\, Johns Hopkins\nTom Rudelius\, Durham University\nVivek Saxena\, Stony Brook and Rutgers\nEdgar Shaghoulian\, UC Santa Cruz\nShu-Heng Shao\, Stony Brook and MIT\nAdar Sharon\, Simons Center for Geometry and Physics\, Stony Brook\nIrene Valenzuela\, IFT and CERN\nThomas Waddleton\, Johns Hopkins\nHao Xu\, University of Göttingen\nXingyang Yu\, Virginia Tech\n\n  \nSchedule  \nTuesday\, Jan. 21\, 2025 \n9:00 – 9:30 am\nBreakfast \n9:30 – 11:00 am\nReview\nLeonardo Rastelli\, Stony Brook University\nYoutube Video \n11:00 – 11:15 am\nBreak \n11:15 am– 12:00 pm\nKelian Haring\, CERN\nTitle: S-matrix bootstrap and black hole production\nAbstract: I will review the expected effects of black hole production in scattering amplitudes. I will consider both symmetry-breaking and elastic amplitudes. I will argue that\, in the elastic case\, this input can be computationally useful. Then\, I will discuss an example of a symmetry-breaking Wilson coefficient as a concrete target for the bootstrap.\nYoutube Video \n12:00 – 1:45 pm\nLunch Break \n1:45 – 2:30 pm\nHo Tat Lam\, MIT\nTitle: Global Aspects of Exactly Marginal Current-Current Deformations\nAbstract: Conformal field theories connected by exactly marginal deformations form conformal manifolds. In two dimensions\, a large class of conformal manifolds is generated by bilinears of currents\, known as current-current deformations. In this talk\, we will revisit these deformations and prove that a dense set of points on the conformal manifolds are related to the seed theory through discrete gauging. This perspective enables us to connect the topology of the conformal manifolds with the anomalies of the currents and to show that enhanced invertible symmetries reorganized into non-invertible symmetries away from the symmetry enhanced points. We will also discuss how current-current deformation can be understood from the recently proposed continuous abelian symmetry topological field theory.\nYoutube Video \n2:30 – 3:15 pm\nTom Banks\, Rutgers University\nTitle: Symmetries in the Hilbert Bundle Formulation of Quantum Gravity\nAbstract: Results of Jacobson\, Carlip and Solodukhin from the 1990s\, as extended by Banks and Zurek in 2021\, point to a solution of Einstein’s equations as a hydrodynamic approximation to a quantum gravitational system\, which determines the density matrix assigned to each subsystem corresponding to a hydrodynamic causal diamond in terms of the Virasoro generator of a cut off 1 + 1 dimensional CFT. The full quantum system can be viewed as a Hilbert bundle over the space of timelike geodesics on the hydrodynamic background. Isometries of the background generically map one fiber of the bundle to another and don’t act on a fixed Hilbert space. Time evolution along each geodesic is given by an analog of “one sided modular flow in QFT”\, which in this context is a sequence of unitary embeddings of smaller diamond Hilbert spaces into larger ones. A full unitary map on the entire Hilbert space of a fiber requires a “Quantum Principle of Relativity” equating the entanglement spectrum of the density matrix of the largest diamond in the overlap between diamonds on different geodesics. In principle\, this implies asymptotic symmetries for spacetimes which have them. For the case of asymptotically AdS space\, this can be worked out in a hand waving way by using the Tensor Network Renormalization Group of Evenbly and Vidal. For asymptotically flat space we probably require a better non-perturbative definition of the space of asymptotic states to understand the action of the Poincare group. For de Sitter space there is no sense in which the de Sitter group acts on any set of asymptotic observables. Ironically\, there IS an approximate de Sitter invariance of at least low point inflationary correlation functions\, but I will not have time to discuss that.\nYoutube Video \n3:15 – 3:45 pm\nBreak \n3:45 – 4:30 pm\nChristian Copetti\, Oxford University\nTitle: Non-Invertible Symmetries\, Generalized Gauging and Factorization\nAbstract: We analyze a toy model for low dimensional holography\, in which the dual theory is an ensemble over 2d RCFTs. This simple model lacks factorization on multi-boundary geometries and at the same time has a (generalized) bulk global symmetry. We show that both problems are solved if the path integral prescription is modified by a generalized gauging operation\, which can also be interpreted as the insertion of (topological) EOW branes.\nYoutube Video \n4:30 – 5:00 pm\nFree Discussion \nWednesday\, Jan. 22\, 2025 \n9:00 – 9:30 am\nBreakfast \n9:30 – 11:00 am\nReview\nDaniel Harlow\, MIT\nYoutube Video \n11:00 – 11:15 am\nBreak \n11:15 am– 12:00 pm\nJacob McNamara\, Caltech\nTitle: Conserved Charges of Closed Universes\nAbstract: In quantum gravity\, while our standard notions of symmetry operator become hard to define\, the notion of conserved charge continues to make sense. After a general discussion of conserved charges in quantum gravity\, I will present a new kinematic invariant of a gravitational path integral that refines the cobordism groups of quantum gravity: the (higher) category of closed universe charges. By categorifying an argument of Coleman\, Giddings\, and Strominger\, I will argue that conserved charges in quantum gravity of any form degree arise only due to a categorical version of ensemble holography.\nYoutube Video \n12:00 – 1:45 pm\nLunch Break \n1:45 – 2:30 pm\nFederico Bonetti\, Durham University\nTitle: Aspects of Categorical Symmetries for Branes\nYoutube Video \n2:30 – 3:15 pm\nKonstantinos Roumpedakis\, Johns Hopkins University\nTitle: Symmetry Operators and Gravity\nAbstract: It is widely believed that there are no conserved charges in a theory of gravity\, based on arguments involving black holes. Moreover\, the modern approach to study global symmetries is the language of topological operators. In this talk\, I will revisit the absence of global symmetries in a theory of gravity from the perspective of topological operators. More specifically\, I will argue that topological operators for continuous symmetries written in terms of currents need regularization\, which effectively gives them a small but finite width. The regulated operator is a finite tension object which fluctuates. In the zero-width limit these fluctuations freeze\, recovering the properties of a topological operator. When gravity is turned on\, the zero-width limit becomes ill-defined\, thereby prohibiting the existence of topological operators. This talk is based on work in collaboration with Ibrahima Bah\, Patrick Jefferson\, and Thomas Waddleton.\nYoutube Video \n3:15 – 3:45 pm\nBreak \n3:45 – 4:30 pm\nIñaki Garcia-Etxebarria\, Durham University\nTitle: Some aspects of symmetry descent\nAbstract: SymTFTs allow us to encode the symmetry structure of Quantum Field Theories in a convenient way. For those QFTs that arise in geometric engineering\, or holography\, we expect to be able to derive the SymTFT from the geometric data of the string background. This talk will describe some recent progress in this direction\, together with S. Hosseini and with F. Gagliano.\nYoutube Video \n4:30 – 5:00 pm\nFree Discussion \n6:00 pm\nDinner at Changsho Restaurant \nThursday\, Jan. 23\, 2025 \n9:00 – 9:30 am\nBreakfast \n9:30 – 11:00 am\nReview\nIrene Valenzuela\, IFT and CERN\nTitle: Breaking of Symmetries in Gravity\nAbstract: Global symmetries are expected to be broken (or gauged) in quantum gravity. However\, we can still learn a lot from understanding the mechanisms by which quantum gravity avoids them and quantifying their breaking. Remarkably\, several Swampland constraints can be reinterpreted as consequences of breaking global symmetries. I will first focus on quantifying the minimal symmetry violation of axionic shift symmetries\, and show how the bottom-up expectation based on black holes seems to hold in string theory examples. I will then discuss how this symmetry violation changes as we move in the moduli space\, implying a drop-off of the quantum gravity cut-off when the symmetry is approximate. Finally\, I will discuss the fate of non-invertible symmetries in string theory\, and how they are typically broken at loop level. Nevertheless\, these approximate non-invertible symmetries are still useful to fill in the gaps in the worldsheet proofs of some Swampland conjectures. \n11:00 – 11:15 am\nBreak \n11:15 am– 12:00 pm\nTom Rudelius\, Durham University\nTitle: A Symmetry-Centric Perspective on the Geometry of the Landscape and the Swampland\nAbstract: As famously observed by Ooguri and Vafa nearly twenty years ago\, scalar field moduli spaces in quantum gravity appear to exhibit various universal features. For instance\, they seem to be infinite in diameter\, have trivial fundamental group\, and feature towers of massive particles that become light in their asymptotic limits. In this talk\, I will explain how these features can be reformulated in more modern language using generalized notions of global symmetries. Such symmetries are ubiquitous in non-gravitational quantum field theories\, but it is widely believed that they must be either gauged or broken in quantum gravity. We will see that the observations of Ooguri and Vafa can be understood as consequences of such gauging or breaking. \n12:00 – 1:45 pm\nLunch Break \n1:45 – 2:30 pm\nMiguel Montero\, IFT\nTitle: Parity symmetry breaking and the membrane Weak Gravity Conjecture\nAbstract: Symmetries are expected to be broken or gauged in any consistent theory of quantum gravity\, and this also applies to spacetime symmetries such as parity. I will argue that\, in the context of 4d N=1 AdS vacua of string theory\, the Weak Gravity Conjecture for membranes case only holds if the vacuum has an exact (i.e. gauged) parity symmetry of Pin+ type. I will give top-down examples of M-theory vacua illustrating this\, and show that in the DGKT scenario (a putative massive IIA vacuum with scale separation\, whose full consistency is the subject of some debate in the literature) there is no parity symmetry\, and the membrane WGC is violated. Thus\, there is either a pathology in DGKT\, or the membrane WGC is wrong. Both possibilities would have interesting consequences\, and I will outline ongoing work to figure out which one is it. \n2:30 – 3:15 pm\nMatilda Delgado\, IFT\nTitle: Dualities\, Defects and Duality Defects\nAbstract: I will outline how duality symmetries in quantum gravity theories naturally predict the existence of defects associated with duality transformations. While some of these objects are well-understood and extensively studied\, others remain enigmatic; I will discuss this with examples. I will conclude by discussing the potential role of dualities in characterising the UV defects predicted by cobordism conjecture (and more generally by the no global symmetries conjecture). Based on: [2412.03640] \n3:15 – 3:45 pm\nBreak \n3:45 – 4:30 pm\nMax Hübner\, Uppsala University\nTitle: Metric Isometries\, Holography\, and Continuous Symmetry Operators\nAbstract: In the AdS/CFT correspondence\, a topological symmetry operator of the boundary CFT is dual to a dynamical brane in the gravitational AdS bulk. Said differently\, this predicts a dynamical brane for every global symmetry of the boundary CFT. We analyze this correspondence for continuous symmetries which arise from a consistent truncation of isometries on the “internal” factor X of AdS × X. We discuss how this perspective can be used to both derive properties of the topological symmetry operators and non-topological properties of their bulk duals. \n4:30 – 5:00 pm\nFree Discussion \n  \nFriday\, Jan. 24\, 2025 \n9:00 – 9:30 am\nBreakfast \n9:30 – 10:15 am\nJonathan Heckman\, University of Pennsylvania\nTitle: Cobordism Utopia\nAbstract: On general grounds one expects that global symmetries are absent in quantum gravity. We discuss some aspects of this issue\, focusing on the recently proposed Swampland Cobordism Conjecture\, and related conjectures connected with completeness of the spectrum of states charged under symmetries. In particular\, the U-dualities of M-theory provide an excellent arena both for testing aspects of these conjectures\, as well as predicting the existence of new dynamical objects. We also comment on how this approach connects to related top down and holographic approaches to constructing and studying gauging and breaking symmetries in quantum gravity. Based on joint work to appear with Braeger\, Debray\, Dierigl\, and Montero. \n10:15 – 11:00 am\nNaomi Gendler\, Harvard University \n11:00 – 11:15 am\nBreak \n11:15 am – 12:00 pm\nDiego Rodriguez-Gomez\, University of Oviedo\nTitle: Non-BPS branes as holographic symmetry operators\nAbstract: We propose a holographic description of the operators implementing continuous global symmetries that are dual to superstring gauge fields in terms of non-BPS D- branes\, and consider some possible further extensions. \n12:00 – 12:45 pm\nGreg Moore\, Rutgers University\nTitle: Summing Over Bordisms In 2d TQFT: Déjà Vu\nAbstract: This is basically a rerun of a talk I gave on zoom for the CMSA on March 16\, 2022. I will review the contents of a paper I wrote with Anindya Banerjee 2201.00903\, but including a few minor updates. I will describe a construction in Topological Field Theory (TFT) which was motivated by developments in the quantum gravity community. The goal is to provide an interpretation of a model discussed by D. Marolf and H. Maxfield 2002.08950 aimed at fitting their model within the functorial framework of Quantum Field Theory (QFT). Given a TFT one can consider – formally – the sum over all bordisms between fixed ingoing and outgoing spatial slices (with appropriate weight factors for the bordisms) of the amplitudes associated to the bordism by the TFT. This construction leads to convergent sums in d\leq 2 dimensions\, at least for for generic parameters of the TFT. I will describe a curious splitting property satisfied by the total amplitude. I view the splitting property as an alternative to ensemble-type interpretations. There will be a cameo appearance of a very interesting paper by Daniel Friedan 2306.00019 which purports to give an axiomatic framework for Euclidean Quantum Gravity (EQG) analogous to the functorial formalism of QFT. I will also note\, in passing\, that these extremely simple\, low-dimensional\, baby baby baby models of EQG admit global symmetries and continuous parameters. \n1:00 pm\nFarewell Lunch \n 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/symmetries/
LOCATION:CMSA 20 Garden Street Cambridge\, Massachusetts 02138 United States
CATEGORIES:Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/Poster_Workshop-on-Symmetries-and-Gravity_2.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250130T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250130T173000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240710T194728Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241218T212836Z
UID:10003399-1738252800-1738258200@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:CMSA/MATH Welcome Back Gathering
DESCRIPTION:Thursday\, Jan. 30\, 2025 \n4:00 pm \nAll CMSA and Math affiliates are invited. \n 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/cmsa-math_13025/
LOCATION:CMSA 20 Garden Street Cambridge\, Massachusetts 02138 United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250213T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250213T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240708T151711Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250328T150436Z
UID:10003396-1739462400-1739466000@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:2025 Ding Shum Lecture: Irit Dinur\, IAS: Expanders from local to global
DESCRIPTION:  \n \nOn February 13\, 2025 the CMSA hosted the sixth annual Ding Shum Lecture\, given by Irit Dinur\, Institute for Advanced Study. \nLocation: Harvard Science Center  Hall A & via Zoom Webinar \nSpeaker: Irit Dinur\, Institute for Advanced Study \n\n\n\nTitle: Expanders from local to global \nAbstract: Imagine a network—like a social network\, a transportation system\, or even a biological system—where every part of the network is robustly connected to the rest. Expander graphs are the mathematical idealization of such networks. They are structures where any small group of points (nodes) has many connections to the rest of the graph\, ensuring that no part is isolated and information (or influence) spreads efficiently throughout.\nWe will begin by surveying expander graphs\, their discovery and construction\, and some fascinating applications such as error-correcting codes\, pseudorandomness\, and probabilistically checkable proofs (PCPs)\, highlighting their role as a foundation for many breakthroughs in theoretical computer science. Then\, we will shift focus to an exciting new kind of expanders called high dimensional expanders (HDXs). While expanders are well-understood and widely applied\, HDXs remain enigmatic\, with potential that we are only starting to uncover. We will talk about a fascinating local to global feature that HDXs have\, and some applications. \n\n \n\n\n\n\nThis event is made possible by the generous funding of Ding Lei and Harry Shum.\n\n\n 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/2025_dingshum/
LOCATION:Harvard Science Center\, 1 Oxford Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138
CATEGORIES:Ding Shum Lecture,Event,Public Lecture,Special Lectures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/DIngShum_21325.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250324T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250524T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240228T180801Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250514T204248Z
UID:10002883-1742806800-1748106000@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Program on Classical\, quantum\, and probabilistic integrable systems - novel interactions and applications
DESCRIPTION:Program on Classical\, quantum\, and probabilistic integrable systems – novel interactions and applications \nDates: March 24–May 24\, 2025  \nLocation: CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge MA 02138 \nExactly solvable models have played pivotal roles in mathematics and physics throughout their history. The program is dedicated to exploring and developing a more recent wave of their influence in stochastic models together with accompanying combinatorial\, classical\, and quantum integrable systems. Topics will include: \n\nColored and uncolored interacting particle systems with associated vertex models and line ensembles\nYang-Baxter integrability and its applications in algebraic combinatorics\, quantum systems\, and conformal field theory\nQuantum stochastic models\, quantum exclusion processes\, and free probability\nEmerging new aspects of classical and quantum integrable systems – hydrodynamics\, large deviations of stochastic models\, and random surface models\n\nOrganizers: \n\nAmol Aggarwal\, Columbia University & Clay Mathematics Institute\nGuillaume Barraquand\, École normale supérieure\, Paris\nAlexei Borodin\, MIT\nIvan Corwin\, Columbia University\nPierre Le Doussal\, École normale supérieure\, Paris\nMichael Wheeler\, University of Melbourne\n\nParticipants \n\nDenis Bernard\, Ecole Normale Supérieure Paris\nAlexey Bufetov\, University of Leipzig\nPasquale Calabrese\, SISSA Trieste\nSylvie Corteel\, UC Berkeley\nCesar Cuenca\, Ohio State University\nJan De Gier\, University of Melbourne\nAndrea De Luca\, CNRS\, Cergy Paris University\nBenjamin Doyon\, King’s College London\nPatrik Ferrari\, University of Bonn\nVadim Gorin\, UC Berkeley\nTamara Grava\, SISSA\nJimmy He\, Ohio State University\nJiaoyang Huang\, University of Pennsylvania\nKurt Johansson\, KTH Stockholm\nRichard Kenyon\, Yale\nAlexandre Krajenbrink\, Cambridge Quantum Computing & Quantinuum\nAtsuo Kuniba\, University of Tokyo\nMatteo Mucciconi\, National University of Singapore\nGreta Panova\, University of Southern California\nLeonid Petrov\, University of Virginia\nSylvain Prolhac\, Université Paul Sabatier\, Toulouse\nTomaž Prosen\, University of Ljubljana\nTomohiro Sasamoto\, Tokyo Institute of Technology\nHerbert Spohn\, Technical University of Munich\nLi-Cheng Tsai\, University of Utah\n\nSchedule \nWeek 1\nMonday\, March 24th \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Lecture 1 of 4: Denis Bernard\, École normale supérieure de Paris: Quantum Exclusion Processes for (and by) Amateurs \n12:00 – 2:00pm Common Room: Program Lunch \n4:00 – 4:30pm Common Room: CMSA colloquium tea \n4:30 – 5:30pm Common Room\, CMSA colloquium: Amol Aggarwal\, Columbia University: The Toda Lattice as a Soliton Gas \n  \nTuesday\, March 25th \n3:30 – 4:00pm Common Room: Program tea \n4:00 – 5:00pm Room G-10\, Seminar: Patrik Ferrari\, Universität Bonn: Decoupling and decay of two-point functions in a two-species TASEP \n  \nWednesday\, March 26th \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Lecture 1 of 3: Atsuo Kuniba\, University of Tokyo: Multispecies ASEP and t-PushTASEP on a ring and a strange five vertex model \n3:00 – 4:00pm Room G-10\, Lecture 2 of 4: Denis Bernard\, École normale supérieure de Paris: Quantum Exclusion Processes for (and by) Amateurs \n4:30 – 5:30pm Common Room: Program wine and cheese reception \n  \nThursday\, March 27th \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Lecture 1 of 2: Benjamin Doyon\, King’s College London: The equations of generalised hydrodynamics\, and their unusual diffusve corrections \nAbstract: I will discuss the hydrodynamics of one-dimensional many-body integrable models. At the Euler scale\, this is given by “generalised hydrodynamics”\, whose equations only depend on the asymptotic state content and the two-body scattering shift of the model. I will explain how these equations arise\, and mention some of their properties: Hamiltonian structure\, exact solutions\, absence of shocks. At the diffusive scale\, generic one-dimensional models with state-dependent currents display super-diffusion. However\, integrable models are in a special class of “linearly degenerate systems”\, where there is no superdiffusion\, and one might expect a standard derivative expansion. I will explain how the diffusive corrections to the Euler equations are not given by a derivative expansion\, but instead governed by long-range correlations coming from an Euler-scale fluctuation theory. I will give the general ideas behind this fluctuation theory\, where initial fluctuations are deterministically transported by the Euler equation. I will finally provide arguments for the conjecture that\, once long-range correlations are accounted for\, there is no emergent stochasticity at all scales of hydrodynamics in integrable systems. \n3:30 – 4:00pm Common Room: Program tea \n4:00 – 5:00pm Room G-10\, Seminar: Sylvie Corteel\, University of California at Berkeley: Crystal Skeletons \n  \nFriday\, March 28th \n12:00 – 1:00 pm Common Room: Lunch with CMSA Member Seminar \n2:00 – 3:00pm Room G-10\, Lecture 3 of 4 : Denis Bernard\, École normale supérieure de Paris: Quantum Exclusion Processes for (and by) Amateurs \n3:30 – 4:00 pm Common Room: Program tea \n  \n\n \nWeek 2\nMonday\, March 31 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Lecture 2 of 2: Benjamin Doyon\, King’s College London: The equations of generalised hydrodynamics\, and their unusual diffusve corrections \nAbstract: I will discuss the hydrodynamics of one-dimensional many-body integrable models. At the Euler scale\, this is given by “generalised hydrodynamics”\, whose equations only depend on the asymptotic state content and the two-body scattering shift of the model. I will explain how these equations arise\, and mention some of their properties: Hamiltonian structure\, exact solutions\, absence of shocks. At the diffusive scale\, generic one-dimensional models with state-dependent currents display super-diffusion. However\, integrable models are in a special class of “linearly degenerate systems”\, where there is no superdiffusion\, and one might expect a standard derivative expansion. I will explain how the diffusive corrections to the Euler equations are not given by a derivative expansion\, but instead governed by long-range correlations coming from an Euler-scale fluctuation theory. I will give the general ideas behind this fluctuation theory\, where initial fluctuations are deterministically transported by the Euler equation. I will finally provide arguments for the conjecture that\, once long-range correlations are accounted for\, there is no emergent stochasticity at all scales of hydrodynamics in integrable systems. \n12:00 – 2:00pm Common Room: Program Lunch \n2:00 – 3:00pm Room G-10\, Lecture 2 of 3: Atsuo Kuniba\, University of Tokyo: Solutions of tetrahedron and 3D reflection equations from quantum cluster algebras \n\nAbstract: Tetrahedron and 3D equations are three-dimensional generalizations of the Yang-Baxter and the reflection equations. I will explain how quantum cluster algebras lead to solutions that generalize and unify many known solutions.  \n\n3:30 – 4:00pm Program tea \n  \nTuesday\, April 1 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Lecture 1 of 2: Kurt Johansson\, KTH Stockholm: Extremal particles in uniform random Gelfand-Tsetlin patterns \nAbstract: I will report on joint work with Elnur Emrah on edge fluctuations in uniform random interlacing patterns with fixed top configuration. The goal is to describe all possible limit processes that can occur\, and the conditions under which they occur. \n3:30pm – 4:00pm\, Common Room: Program tea \n  \nWednesday\, April 2 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Lecture 4 of 4: Denis Bernard\, École normale supérieure de Paris: Quantum Exclusion Processes for (and by) Amateurs \n3:00 – 4:00pm Room G-10\, Lecture 3 of 3: Atsuo Kuniba\, University of Tokyo: Box-ball systems \nAbstract: Box-ball systems are one-dimensional integrable cellular automata introduced in 1990. This talk surveys major developments that have unfolded consistently over the decades\, enriching the scope of the theory. Topics include ultradiscretization\, crystal theory in quantum groups\, the combinatorial and thermodynamic Bethe ansatz\, as well as generalized hydrodynamics. \n4:30 – 5:30pm Common Room: Program wine and cheese reception \n  \nThursday\, April 3 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Lecture 2 of 2: Kurt Johansson\, KTH Stockholm: Extremal particles in uniform random Gelfand-Tsetlin patterns \nAbstract: I will report on joint work with Elnur Emrah on edge fluctuations in uniform random interlacing patterns with fixed top configuration. The goal is to describe all possible limit processes that can occur\, and the conditions under which they occur. \n3:30pm – 4:00pm Common Room: Program tea \n  \nFriday\, April 4 \n12:00 – 1:00pm Common Room: CMSA Member Seminar and Lunch \n3:30 – 4:00pm Common Room: Program tea \n  \n\n \nWeek 3\nMonday\, April 7 \n12:00 – 2:00pm Common Room: Program lunch \n4:00 – 4:30pm Tea with CMSA colloquium \n4:30 – 5:30pm CMSA Colloquium: Ben Webster\, University of Waterloo and Perimeter Institute: 3-D Mirror Symmetry \n  \nTuesday\, April 8 \n11:00am – 2:00pm Room G-10\, Pierre Le Doussal\, École normale supérieure de Paris: Exact results for the macroscopic fluctuation theory of the 1D weakly asymmetric exclusion process. \n3:30 – 4:00pm Common Room: Program tea  \n  \nWednesday\, April 9 \n12:00 – 1:00pm Common Room\, CMSA Q&A Seminar and lunch: Eric Maskin\, Harvard Economics: The Mathematics of Voting \n4:30 – 5:30pm Common Room: Program wine and cheese reception \n  \nThursday\, April 10 \n3:30 – 4:00pm Common Room: Program tea  \n  \nFriday\, April 11 \n12:00 – 1:00pm Common Room: CMSA member seminar and lunch \n3:30 – 4:00pm Common Room: Program tea \n  \n\nWeek 4\nMonday\, April 14 \n12:00 – 2:00pm Common Room: Program lunch \n4:00 – 4:30pm Tea with CMSA colloquium \n4:30 –5:30pm CMSA colloquium: Andrey Smirnov\, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: Quantum K-theory at roots of unity \n  \nTuesday\, April 15 \n11:00 am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Ivan Corwin\, Columbia University: How Yang-Baxter unravels Kardar-Parisi-Zhang \nAbstract: Over the past few decades\, physicists and then mathematicians have sought to uncover the (conjecturally) universal long time and large space scaling limit for the so-called Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) class of stochastically growing interfaces in (1+1)-dimensions. Progress has been marked by several breakthroughs\, starting with the identification of a few free-fermionic integrable models in this class and their single-point limiting distributions\, widening the field to include non-free-fermionic integrable representatives\, evaluating their asymptotics distributions at various levels of generality\, constructing the conjectural full space-time scaling limit\, known as the directed landscape\, and checking convergence to it for a few of the free-fermion representatives. \nIn this talk\, I will describe a method that should prove convergence for all known integrable representatives of the KPZ class to this universal scaling limit. The method has been fully realized for the Asymmetric Simple Exclusion Process and the Stochastic Six Vertex Model. It relies on the Yang-Baxter equation as its only input and unravels the rich complexity of the KPZ class and its asymptotics from first principles. This is based on a few works involving Amol Aggarwal\, Alexei Borodin\, Milind Hegde\, Jiaoyang Huang and me. \n3:30 – 4:00pm Common Room: Program tea  \n  \nWednesday\, April 16 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Tamara Grava\, University of Bristol: Random solitons and soliton gas \nAbstract: A soliton is a localised travelling wave solution of a nonlinear dispersive equation. When the equation is integrable the interaction of many solitons is elastic. We study the behaviour of a set of N solitons for the Korteweg de Vries equation in the limit N goes to infinity (soliton gas) and the interaction of the soliton gas with a distinct soliton that we call a tracer soliton. We show that the average velocity of the tracer soliton satisfies the Zakharov-El kinetic equations. We then consider a set of random N soliton solution q_N(x\,t) and its limiting soliton gas q(x\,t). We prove a central limit theorem for the difference q_N(x\,t)-q(x\,t) for values of x and t that are bounded by log(N). \n12:00 – 1:00pm Common Room: CMSA Q&A seminar and lunch: Noah Golowich\, MIT: What is length generalization in large language models? \n4:30 – 5:30pm Common Room: Program wine and cheese reception \n  \nThursday\, April 17 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Guillaume Barraquand\, École normale supérieure de Paris: Large time cumulants of the open KPZ equation \n12:00 – 1:00pm Common Room: lunch with featured Yip Lecture speaker Scott Aaronson and CMSA residents \n3:30pm Common Room: Program tea  \n4:00 – 5:00pm Science Center Hall A: Fifth Annual Yip Lecture\, Scott Aaronson: How Much Math is Knowable? \n5:00 – 6:00pm Math Department Common Room at the Harvard Science Center: Yip Lecture reception \n  \nFriday\, April 18 \n12:00 – 1:00pm Common Room: CMSA Member Seminar and lunch: Han Shao\, Harvard CMSA\, Topic TBD \n3:30 – 4:00pm Common Room: Program tea \n  \n\nWeek 5\n  \nMonday\, April 21 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Tomaz Prosen\, University of Ljubljana\, Lecture 1 of 3: On Integrable Quantum and Classical Circuits (with Stochastic Boundaries) \nAbstract: I will introduce Yang-Baxter integrable brickwork quantum circuit models and discuss their integrability structure\, specifically\, the transfer matrix\, conservation laws etc. A paradigmatic example\, XXZ or unitary 6-vertex circuits exhibit an unusual link to KPZ scaling at the isotropic (SU(2) symmetric) point. I will establish the link to corresponding classical integrable Landau-Lifshitz circuits and discuss some aspects of transport and full counting statistics. \n12:00 – 2:00pm Common Room: Program Lunch \n4:00 – 4:30pm Common Room: CMSA colloquium tea \n4:30 – 5:30pm  Common Room\, CMSA colloquium: Ila Fiete\, MIT: Modeling the emergence of complex cortical structure from simple precursors in the brain: maps\, hierarchies\, and modules \n  \nTuesday\, April 22 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Tomohiro Sasamoto\, Tokyo Institute of Technology: Large deviation of symmetric models through classical integrable systems \n3:30pm Common Room: Program tea  \n  \nWednesday\, April 23 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Tomaz Prosen\, University of Ljubljana: On Integrable Quantum and Classical Circuits (with Stochastic Boundaries) \nAbstract: I will discuss explicit matrix product solutions for quantum many-body Markov chains\, defined for a Yang-Baxter integrable quantum circuit with specific stochastic Kraus processes at its boundaries. In the continuous time limit\, these solutions correspond to steady states of boundary driven Lindbladian dynamics and often yield non-trivial quasi-local conservation laws of integrable spin chains. The specific case of XXZ and Hubbard chain will be discussed. \n12:00 – 1:00pm Common Room: CMSA Q&A seminar and lunch: Alexei Borodin\, MIT: Connections between physics and probability \n4:30 – 5:30pm Common Room: Program wine and cheese reception \n  \nThursday\, April 24 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Sylvain Prolhac\, Université Paul Sabatier\, Toulouse: Approach to stationarity for KPZ fluctuations in finite volume \nAbstract: At late times $t$\, the cumulants of the height for the KPZ fixed point in finite volume behave as affine functions of time $c_k(t) = a_k t+b_k$\, up to exponentially small corrections. The constant term $b_k$ is the last remaining information about the initial state observable at long enough times. Two approaches allow us to compute this constant from the totally asymmetric exclusion process\, a discrete version of the KPZ fixed point. First\, an iterated version of the matrix product representation for the stationary state leads\, for arbitrary initial conditions\, to expressions involving extreme value statistics of Brownian paths. On the other hand\, Bethe ansatz leads to rather explicit expressions for simple initial conditions. Comparison between the two approaches then provides conjectures for some generating functions of Brownian paths. \n3:30pm Common Room: Program tea  \n  \nFriday\, April 25 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Tomaz Prosen\, University of Ljubljana\, Lecture 3 of 3: On Integrable Quantum and Classical Circuits (with Stochastic Boundaries) \nAbstract: In the last lecture I will discuss the possibility of quantum integrability of many-body quantum Markov chain generators\, such as Lindbladians with bulk or boundary dissipation\, and the corresponding circuit (Kraus) counterparts. The paradigmatic example is the XX model with dephasing noise which can be mapped to a Hubbard model with imaginary interaction\, both in the Hamiltonian and circuit formulation. \n3:30 – 4:00pm Common Room: Program tea \n  \n\nWeek 6\n  \nMonday\, April 28 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Herbert Spohn\, Technische Universitaet Muenchen\, Lecture 1 of 3: Integral many-body systems and GHD \n12:00 – 2:00pm Common Room: Program Lunch \n2:00 – 3:00 pm Room G-10\, Tomohiro Sasamoto\, Tokyo Institute of Technology\, Exact density profile and current fluctuations in a tight-binding chain with dephasing noise \nAbstract: We consider a tight-binding chain with dephasing noise\, whose time evolution is described by the quantum master equation called the Gorini-Kossakowski-Sudarhan-Lindblad (GKSL) equation. By using a connection of this model to the Hubbard model with imaginary coupling [1]\, we study the density profile [2] and the variance of the current [3] exactly for the model on the infinite line by writing down contour integral formulas using Bethe ansatz. The talk is based on collaborations with Taiki Ishiyama and Kazuya Fujimoto.  \n4:00 – 4:30pm Common Room: CMSA colloquium tea \n4:30 –5:30pm Room G-10\, CMSA colloquium: Peter Sarnak\, IAS and Princeton University\, Bass-Note Spectra of locally uniform geometries \n  \nTuesday\, April 29 \n11:00 am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Pasquale Calabrese\, SISSA Trieste\, Lecture 1 of 3: Quantum Mpemba effect \n2:00 – 3:00 pm Room G-10\, Greta Panova\, University of Southern California\, Grothendieck shenanigans: permutons from pipe dreams via integrable probability \nAbstract: Pipe dreams are tiling models originally introduced to study objects related to the Schubert calculus and K-theory of the Grassmannian. They can also be viewed as ensembles of random lattice walks with various interaction constraints. In our quest to understand what the maximal and typical algebraic objects look like\, we revealed some interesting permutons. The proofs use the theory of the Totally Asymmetric Simple Exclusion Process (TASEP). Deeper connections with domino tilings of the Aztec diamond and its frozen boundary allow us to describe the extreme cases of the original algebraic problem. This is based on joint work with A. H. Morales\, L. Petrov\, D. Yeliussizov. \n3:30 – 4:00pm Common Room: Program tea  \n  \nWednesday\, April 30 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Herbert Spohn\, Technische Universitaet Muenchen\, Lecture 2 of 3: Integral many-body systems and GHD \n12:00 – 1:00pm (tentative) Common Room: CMSA Q&A seminar and lunch \n3:00 – 4pm Room G-10\, Pasquale Calabrese\, SISSA Trieste\, Entanglement evolution and quasiparticle picture 1 \n4:30 – 5:30pm Common Room: Program wine and cheese reception \n  \nThursday\, May 1 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Herbert Spohn\, Technische Universitaet Muenchen\, Lecture 3 of 3: Integral many-body systems and GHD \n2:00 – 3:00 pm Room G-10\, Li-Cheng Tsai\, University of Utah\, Stochastic heat flow by moments \nAbstract: The Stochastic Heat Flow (SHF) is the scaling limit of the directed polymers in random environments and the noise-mollified Stochastic Heat Equation (SHE)\, at the critical dimension of two and near the critical temperature. The finite-dimensional distributions of the SHF was obtained by Caravenna\, Sun\, and Zygouras (2023) by proving that the discrete polymers converge to a universal (model-independent) limit. In this talk\, I will report a new approach based on axioms. We formulate the SHF as a two-parameter continuous measure-valued process that satisfies a set of axioms\, and prove the uniqueness in law under these axioms. The key feature of the axioms concerns the matching of the first four moments. As an application\, we prove the convergence of the noise-mollified SHE to the SHF\, which only requires moment estimates. \n3:30pm Common Room: Program tea  \n  \nFriday\, May 2 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Pasquale Calabrese\, SISSA Trieste\, Lecture 3 of 3: Entanglement evolution and quasiparticle picture 2 \n12:00 – 1:00pm Common Room\, CMSA Member seminar and lunch \n2:00 – 3:00 pm Room G-10\, Leonid Petrov\, University of Virginia: Random Fibonacci Words \nAbstract: Fibonacci words are words of 1’s and 2’s\, graded by the total sum of the digits. They form a differential poset YF which is an estranged cousin of the Young lattice powering irreducible representations of the symmetric group. We introduce families of “coherent” measures on YF depending on many parameters\, which come from the theory of clone Schur functions (Okada 1994). We characterize parameter sequences ensuring positivity of the measures\, and we describe the large-scale behavior of some ensembles of random Fibonacci words. The subject has connections to total positivity of tridiagonal matrices\, Stieltjes moment sequences\, orthogonal polynomials from the (q-)Askey scheme\, and residual allocation (stick-breaking) models. Based on a joint work with Jeanne Scott. \n3:30 – 4:00pm Common Room: Program tea \n\nWeek 7\n  \nMonday\, May 5 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Jan De Gier\, University of Melbourne\, Lecture 1 of 3: Pfaffian point process for TASEP on the half line \n12:00 – 2:00pm Common Room: Program Lunch \n2:00 – 3:00 pm  Jiaoyang Huang\, University of Pennsylvania: Ramanujan Property and Edge Universality of Random Regular Graphs \nAbstract: Extremal eigenvalues of graphs are of particular interest in theoretical computer science and combinatorics. Specifically\, the spectral gap—the difference between the largest and second-largest eigenvalues—measures the expansion properties of a graph. In this talk\, I will focus on random d-regular graphs.I will begin by providing background on the eigenvalues of random d-regular graphs and their connections to random matrix theory. In the second part of the talk\, I will discuss our recent results on eigenvalue rigidity and edge universality for these graphs. Eigenvalue rigidity asserts that\, with high probability\, each eigenvalue concentrates around its classical location as predicted by the Kesten-McKay distribution. Edge universality states that the second-largest eigenvalue and the smallest eigenvalue of random d-regular graphs converge to the Tracy-Widom distribution from the Gaussian Orthogonal Ensemble. Consequently\, approximately 69% of d-regular graphs are Ramanujan graphs. This work is based on joint work with Theo McKenzie and Horng-Tzer Yau. \n  \n4:00 – 4:30pm Common Room: CMSA colloquium tea \n4:30 –5:30pm Common Room\, CMSA colloquium: Ariel Procaccia\, Harvard University\, Thinking Outside the Ballot Box \n  \nTuesday\, May 6 \n11:00 am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Jan De Gier\, University of Melbourne\, Lecture 2 of 3: Pfaffian point process for TASEP on the half line \n2:00 – 3:00 Richard Kenyon\, Yale University\, Multinomial dimers and 3d limit shapes \nAbstract: The “multinomial dimer model” on a graph G is the dimer model on the N-fold blow up of G (the graph obtained by replacing each vertex with N vertices and each edge with a complete bipartite graph K_{N\,N}). In the large N limit this model is tractable for general graphs: we find formulas for the partition function and limit shapes in some natural settings\, including a three-dimensional version of the Aztec Diamond. This is joint work with Catherine Wolfram (Yale). \n3:30 – 4:00pm Common Room: Program tea  \n  \nWednesday\, May 7 \n3:00 – 4pm Room G-10\, Jan De Gier\, University of Melbourne\, Lecture 3 of 3: Pfaffian point process for TASEP on the half line \n4:30 – 5:30pm Common Room: Program wine and cheese reception \n  \nThursday\, May 8: \n2:00 – 3:00 pm Room G-10\, Andrea De Luca\, CNRS Cergy Paris University\, Monitored quantum systems\, product of random matrices and permutations \n3:30pm Common Room: Program tea  \n  \nFriday\, May 9: \n12:00 – 1:00pm Common Room: CMSA Member Seminar and lunch\, Sergiy Verstyuk\, Harvard CMSA\, Title TBD \n2:00 – 3:00 pm Room G-10\, Cesar Cuenca\, Ohio State University\, Random partitions at high temperature \nAbstract: By using Fourier transforms based on Jack symmetric polynomials\, we study discrete particle ensembles x_1>x_2>…>x_N with the inverse temperature beta in the regime where beta tends to zero\, as the number of particles tends to infinity. We prove the LLN and characterize the limiting measure in terms of a moment problem. For fixed-time distributions of special Markov chains\, the limiting measures can be expressed in terms of the eigenvalues of certain Jacobi operators. \n3:30 – 4:00pm Common Room: Program tea \n\nWeek 8\n  \nMonday\, May 12 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10\, Jimmy He\, Ohio State University\, Symmetries of periodic and free boundary measures on partitions \nAbstract: The periodic and free boundary q-Whittaker measures are probability measures on partitions defined in terms of q-Whittaker functions and an additional parameter $u$ controlling the behavior of the system at the boundary. I will explain a hidden distributional symmetry of this model which exchanges the $u$ and $q$ parameters\, as well as related results on Hall-Littlewood measures. As a special case\, we recover identities of Imamura–Mucciconi–Sasamoto. This is joint work with Michael Wheeler. \n12:00 – 2:00pm Common Room: Program Lunch \n4:00 – 4:30pm Common Room: CMSA colloquium tea \n4:30 – 5:30pm Common Room\, CMSA colloquium: Anna Seigal\, Harvard University\, Factorizations for data analysis \n  \nTuesday\, May 13 \n3:30pm Common Room: Program tea  \n  \nWednesday\, May 14 \n12:00 – 1:00pm Common Room: CMSA Conference Reports seminar and lunch: Hugo Cui\, Harvard CMSA\, reporting on the Perimeter Institute Theory+AI Workshop \n3:00 – 4:00pm Room G-10\, Alexandre Krajenbrink\, Cambridge Quantum Computing and Quantinuum\, Unveiling the classical integrable structure of the weak noise theory of the KPZ class: example of the matrix Log–Gamma polymer and the q-TASEP \n4:30 – 5:30pm Common Room: Program wine and cheese reception \n  \nThursday\, May 15 \n11:00am – 12:00pm Room G-10: Roger Van Peski\, Columbia University\, Integrability in discrete random matrix theory \n\nAbstract: Integrable structure has been well-used in classical random matrix theory\, and recently is also enjoying application in the parallel world of discrete random matrices (over integers\, p-adic integers\, and finite fields). In this talk I will try to cover—at least briefly—the following:\n\n\nSome favorite probabilistic results (convergence of discrete random matrix local limits to a new integrable interacting particle system\, the ‘reflecting Poisson sea’)\,\nSome exact formulas with Hall-Littlewood polynomials that make these results possible\, and \nSome intriguing newer formulas (joint with Jiahe Shen) for Hermitian and antisymmetric p-adic matrices\, which naturally feature ‘formal’ Hall-Littlewood processes with negative t parameter.\n\n\n\n2:00 – 3:00 pm Room G-10\, Matteo Mucciconi\, National University Singapore\, Orthogonality of spin q-Whittaker polynomials \nAbstract: Spin q-Whittaker polynomials are a family of symmetric polynomials that can be defined as partition functions of a solvable lattice model. Their study reveals that they possess mysterious properties such as additional “unorthodox” symmetries\, eigenrelations with respect to difference operators and a self orthogonality that I will prove in the talk. A particular case of these results include a novel orthogonality for the Grothendieck polynomials from K-theory of Grassmannian. I will also discuss applications to exact solutions of directed random polymer models with Beta weights. \n3:30pm Common Room: Program tea  \n  \nFriday\, May 16 \n12:00 – 1:00pm Common Room: CMSA Member Seminar  and lunch: Samy Jelassi\, Echo Chamber: RL Post-training Amplifies Behaviors Learned in Pretraining \n3:30 – 4:00pm Common Room: Program tea \n\nVideos are available on the Youtube Playlist. \n\n 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/integrablesystems2025/
LOCATION:CMSA 20 Garden Street Cambridge\, Massachusetts 02138 United States
CATEGORIES:Event,Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/featured_Classical-quantum-probabalistic-2.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250404T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250405T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20241213T155434Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250415T134135Z
UID:10003651-1743757200-1743872400@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Current Developments in Mathematics 2025
DESCRIPTION:When: April 4\, 2025 – April 5\, 2025\n\n\nWhere: Science Center Hall C \nAddress: 1 Oxford Street\, Cambridge\, MA 02138\, United States\n\nSpeaker: Michael Chapman – NYU | Pazit Haim-Kislev – Institute for Advanced Study | Jianfeng Lin – Tsinghua University | Laura Monk – University of Bristol | Ramon van Handel – Princeton University\n\nIN-PERSON REGISTRATION\nLimited funding to help defray travel expenses is available for graduate students and recent PhDs. If you are a graduate student or postdoc and would like to apply for support\, please register and send a letter to cdm@math.harvard.edu. \nA letter indicating your name\, address\, current status\, university affiliation\, citizenship\, and area of study. F1 visa holders are eligible to apply for support. If you are a graduate student\, please send a brief letter of recommendation from a faculty member to explain the relevance of the conference to your studies or research. \nDetailed schedule of lectures and events coming soon. \nOrganizers: David Jerison\, Paul Seidel\, Nike Sun (MIT); Denis Auroux\, Mark Kisin\, Lauren Williams\, Horng-Tzer Yau\, Shing-Tung Yau (Harvard).  \nSponsored by the National Science Foundation (pending)\, Harvard University Mathematics\, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. \nHarvard University is committed to maintaining a safe and healthy educational and work environment in which no member of the University community is\, on the basis of sex\, sexual orientation\, or gender identity\, excluded from participation in\, denied the benefits of\, or subjected to discrimination in any University program or activity. More information can be found here. \n\n\nCurrent Developments in Mathematics 2025 \n \n 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/cdm2025/
LOCATION:Harvard Science Center\, 1 Oxford Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138
CATEGORIES:Conference,Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/CDM-2025-Poster-1115-scaled-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250408T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250408T103000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20250331T204029Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250409T143732Z
UID:10003731-1744102800-1744108200@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:CMSA/Tsinghua Math-Science Literature Lecture: Scott Sheffield (MIT): Yang-Mills theory and random surfaces
DESCRIPTION:CMSA/Tsinghua Math-Science Literature Lecture \nDate: April 8\, 2025 \nTime: 9:00 – 10:30 am ET \nLocation: CMSA G10\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge MA & via Zoom \nSpeaker: Scott Sheffield (MIT) \nTitle: Yang-Mills theory and random surfaces \nAbstract: The Clay Institute famously offered one million dollars to anyone who could mathematically construct and understand a certain continuum version of “Yang-Mills gauge theory.” This theory is the basis of the standard model of physics\, and the heart of the problem is to understand the so-called “Wilson loop expectations.” Following recent work with Sky Cao and Minjae Park\, I will explain how the “Wilson loop expectations” in a lattice Yang-Mills model are equivalent to “insertion costs” of loops in a related random-closed-surface-ensemble model. In a sense\, these results allow us to convert one famously hard problem into another presumably hard problem. But the new problem is all about random surfaces and random permutations\, and it has a lot of relationships with and similarities to other problems we understand (think domino tilings\, random planar maps\, Young tableaux and symmetric group representation theory\, and the Weingarten calculus). It gives us some intuition for *why* certain things should be true like the “area law” or “exponential correlation decay” (what physicists call “quark confinement” or “mass gap”) even if we can’t prove all of them yet. \n\nBeginning in Spring 2020\, the CMSA began hosting a lecture series on literature in the mathematical sciences\, with a focus on significant developments in mathematics that have influenced the discipline\, and the lifetime accomplishments of significant scholars.
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/mathscilit2025_ss/
LOCATION:CMSA Room G10\, CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138\, United States
CATEGORIES:Math Science Literature Lecture Series,Public Lecture,Special Lectures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/Mathlit_Sheffield_11x17-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250417T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250417T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20250108T143958Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250422T182732Z
UID:10003655-1744905600-1744909200@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Fifth Annual Yip Lecture | Scott Aaronson (UT Austin): How Much Math Is Knowable?
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Scott Aaronson\, Department of Computer Science\, University of Texas\, Austin \nScott Aaronson is the founding director at the Quantum Information Center at the University of Texas at Austin. \nDate: April 17\, 2025 \nTime: 4:00-5:00 pm ET  (Reception following in the Math Common Room) \nLocation: Harvard Science Center Hall A \n  \nTitle: How Much Math Is Knowable? \nAbstract: Theoretical computer science has over the years sought more and more refined answers to the question of which mathematical truths are knowable by finite beings like ourselves\, bounded in time and space and subject to physical laws.  I’ll tell a story that starts with Gödel’s Incompleteness Theorem and Turing’s discovery of uncomputability.  I’ll then introduce the spectacular Busy Beaver function\, which grows faster than any computable function.  Work by me and Yedidia\, along with recent improvements by O’Rear and Riebel\, has shown that the value of BB(745) is independent of the axioms of set theory; on the other end\, an international collaboration proved last year that BB(5) = 47\,176\,870.  I’ll speculate on whether BB(6) will ever be known\, by us or our AI successors.  I’ll next discuss the P!=NP conjecture and what it does and doesn’t mean for the limits of machine intelligence.  As my own specialty is quantum computing\, I’ll summarize what we know about how scalable quantum computers\, assuming we get them\, will expand the boundary of what’s mathematically knowable.  I’ll end by talking about hypothetical models even beyond quantum computers\, which might expand the boundary of knowability still further\, if one is able (for example) to jump into a black hole\, create a closed timelike curve\, or project oneself onto the holographic boundary of the universe. \n  \nThe Yip Lecture takes place thanks to the support of Dr. Shing-Yiu Yip. \n  \n\nThe previous Yip Lecture featured Josh Tenenbaum (MIT) who spoke on How to grow a mind from a brain: From guessing and betting to thinking and talking \n 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/yip-2025/
LOCATION:Harvard Science Center\, 1 Oxford Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138
CATEGORIES:Event,Public Lecture,Special Lectures,Yip Lecture Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/Yip_2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250602T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250604T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20241107T214041Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250605T193626Z
UID:10003619-1748854800-1749056400@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Summer School in Total Positivity and Quantum Field Theory
DESCRIPTION:Summer School in Total Positivity and Quantum Field Theory \nDates: June 2–4\, 2025 \nLocation: CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge MA \n\n\nIn the past decade\, there has been a great deal of interest and progress in the study of algebro-combinatorial and geometric structures appearing across diverse areas of physics\, from particle physics to cosmology. As these research programs expand\, there is an ever-growing need for mathematicians and physicists to collaborate effectively and build a shared language. Join us at Harvard University’s Center of Mathematical Sciences and Applications for a week-long summer school dedicated to addressing these interdisciplinary connections. The school welcomes graduate students\, postdocs\, and early-career researchers drawn to the intersection of mathematics and physics. Whether you are an algebraic combinatorialist looking for a better grasp on the physics\, a high energy theorist trying to figure out the math\, or a newcomer to both fields\, this summer school offers an ideal opportunity for you to learn. \n\n\nCourses taught by both mathematicians and physicists will connect ideas from total positivity\, matroid theory\, discrete geometry\, and real algebraic geometry with fundamental questions in quantum field theory. Topics will include amplituhedra\, cluster algebras\, and positive geometry as they relate to scattering amplitudes and cosmological correlators in high-energy physics. Our courses are designed to be accessible to a varied audience; speakers will be mindful of the diverse backgrounds of the participants from both fields. \nAmid this exciting period of collaboration between mathematicians and physicists\, we look forward to exploring these rich\, cutting-edge topics with you. \n\nCourses: \n\nPositive Grassmannian and Cluster Algebras\, Lara Bossinger (Instituto de Matemáticas Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)\nslides  | exercises\n\n  \n\nPositive Geometry and Canonical Forms\, Simon Telen (MPI Leipzig)\nslides\n\n  \n\nScattering Amplitudes and Amplituhedra\, Marcus Spradlin (Brown)\nexercises\n\n  \n\nCosmology and Cosmological Polytopes\, Nima Arkani-Hamed (IAS)\n\n  \n\nOrganizers:  Jonathan Boretsky (McGill University) |  Matteo Parisi (Harvard CMSA and IAS Princeton) | Lauren Williams (Harvard University) \n\nYoutube Playlist \nSchedule  \nMonday\, June 2\, 2025 \n\n\n\n8:30–9:00 am\nMorning Reception\n\n\n9:00–10:00 am\nLara Bossinger: Positive Grassmannian and Cluster Algebras I\n\n\n10:00–10:30 am\nCoffee Break\n\n\n10:30–11:10 am\nExercises\n\n\n11:10 am–12:10 pm\nNima Arkani-Hamed: Cosmology and Cosmological Polytopes I\n\n\n12:10–2:00 pm\nLunch Break\n\n\n2:00–3:00 pm\nNima Arkani-Hamed: Cosmology and Cosmological Polytopes II\n\n\n3:00–3:30 pm\nCoffee Break\n\n\n3:30–4:10 pm\nExercises\n\n\n4:10–5:10 pm\nNima Arkani-Hamed: Cosmology and Cosmological Polytopes III\n\n\n\n  \nTuesday\, June 3\, 2025 \n\n\n\n8:30–9:00 am\nMorning Reception\n\n\n9:00–10:00 am\nLara Bossinger: Positive Grassmannian and Cluster Algebras II\n\n\n10:00–10:30 am\nCoffee Break\n\n\n10:30–11:30 am\nMarcus Spradlin: Scattering Amplitudes and Amplituhedra I\n\n\n11:30 am–12:10 pm\nExercises\n\n\n12:10–2:00 pm\nLunch Break\n\n\n2:00–3:00 pm\nSimon Telen: Definitions and first examples of positive geometries\n\n\n3:00–3:30 pm\nCoffee Break\n\n\n3:30–4:30 pm\nLightning Talks\n\n\n4:30–5:30 pm\nSimon Telen: Positive geometry of polytopes\n\n\n\n  \nWednesday\, June 4\, 2025 \n\n\n\n8:30–9:00 am\nMorning Reception\n\n\n9:00–10:00 am\nLara Bossinger: Positive Grassmannian and Cluster Algebras III\n\n\n10:00–10:30 am\nCoffee Break\n\n\n10:30–11:10 am\nExercises\n\n\n11:10 am–12:10 pm\nMarcus Spradlin: Scattering Amplitudes and Amplituhedra II\n\n\n12:10–2:00 pm\nLunch Break\n\n\n2:00–3:00 pm\nMarcus Spradlin: Scattering Amplitudes and Amplituhedra III\n\n\n3:00–3:30 pm\nCoffee Break\n\n\n3:30–4:30 pm\nSimon Telen: Positive geometry of polypols\n\n\n4:30–5:10 pm\nExercises\n\n\n\n  \n\nImage credit: Annabel Ma (Harvard College)
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/positivityqft/
LOCATION:CMSA 20 Garden Street Cambridge\, Massachusetts 02138 United States
CATEGORIES:Event,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/SummerSchool_poster_11x17_v2-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250630T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250711T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20240219T200745Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250714T144712Z
UID:10002770-1751274000-1752253200@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Quantum Field Theory and Topological Phases via Homotopy Theory and Operator Algebras
DESCRIPTION:Workshop on Quantum Field Theory and Topological Phases via Homotopy Theory and Operator Algebras \nDates: June 30 – July 11\, 2025 \nLocation: CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge MA and Max Planck Institute for Mathematics\, Bonn\, Germany \nThis event is a twinned workshop at the CMSA (Harvard) and the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics (Bonn). Lectures will alternate between the two sites\, watched simultaneously on both sides\, and there will be opportunities for dialogue between the locations. The first week will contain four pedagogical lecture series; lecturers and locations are \nMichael Hopkins\, Harvard  (CMSA)Alexei Kitaev\, Caltech (CMSA)Pieter Naaijkens\, Cardiff (MPIM)Bruno Nachtergaele\, UC Davis (MPIM) \nThe second week will consist of research talks. \nParticipants are strongly encouraged to attend at the location that minimizes travel and hence the ecological impact of the conference. \nThe application deadline was March 16\, 2025. \nDirections to CMSA \nMPIM-Bonn location: https://www.mpim-bonn.mpg.de/qft25  \n  \nRegister for Zoom Webinar \n  \nQuantum Field Theory (QFT) and Quantum Statistical Mechanics are central to high energy physics and condensed matter physics; they also raise deep questions in mathematics. The application of operator algebras to these areas of physics is well-known. Recent developments indicate that to understand some aspects QFT properly a further ingredient is needed: homotopy theory and infinity-categories. One such development is the recognition that symmetry in a QFT is better described by a homotopy type rather than a group (so-called generalized symmetries). Another one is the work of Lurie and others on extended Topological Field Theory (TFT) and the Baez-Dolan cobordism hypothesis. Finally\, there is a conjecture of Kitaev that invertible phases of matter are classified by homotopy groups of an Omega-spectrum. This workshop will bring together researchers and students approaching this physics using different mathematical techniques: operator algebras\, homotopy theory\, higher category theory\, etc. The goal is to catalyze new interactions between different communities. At the workshop recent developments will be reviewed and hopefully progress can be made on two outstanding problems: the Kitaev conjecture as well as the long-standing goal of finding a proper mathematical formulation for QFT. \nOrganizers: \n\nDan Freed\, Harvard University CMSA & Math\nDennis Gaitsgory\, MPIM Bonn\nOwen Gwilliam\, UMass Amherst\nAnton Kapustin\, Caltech\nCatherine Meusburger\, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg\n\n  \nTalks are recorded and available on the CMSA Youtube Playlist. \n\nBACKGROUND READING \nParticipants are encouraged to have some basic familiarity with the definition of a C*-algebra and quantum spin system. Some knowledge of quantum channels (completely positive trace-preserving maps) and quantum circuits will be useful. Some knowledge of Clifford algebras will also be helpful. \nPossible references include: \n 1) arXiv:1311.2717 (Sections 2.1\, 2.2\, 2.4\, and 2.5 up to Theorem 2.5.3) \n 2) Lectures by Daniel Spiegel on “C*-Algebraic Foundations of Quantum Spin Systems”\, at the Summer School on C*-Algebraic Quantum Mechanics and Topological Phases of Matter\, University of Colorado Boulder\, July 29 to August 2\, 2024. (lecture notes and video recordings: https://sites.google.com/colorado.edu/caqm). \n3) https://nextcloud.tfk.ph.tum.de/etn/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/JvN_lecture_notes_S2016_abcde-1.pdf \n4) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classification_of_Clifford_algebras \n5) Karoubi\, K-theory\, section III.3 \n6.) Alexei Kitaev: A norm bound for 1D local matrices (pdf) \n  \nSchedule Times are Eastern Time  \ndownload schedule pdf \nWorkshop on Quantum Field Theory and Topological Phases via Homotopy Theory and Operator Algebras \nJune 30 – July 11\, 2025 \n  \n\n\n\n\nMonday\, June 30 \n\n\n\n\n8:00–9:00 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nBruno Nachtergaele\, UC Davis \nTitle: Ground states of quantum lattice systems: Quantum Lattice Systems: observables\, dynamics\, ground states\, GNS representation\, ground state gap\, examples \n\n\n\n\n9:00–9:30 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nBreakfast break \n\n\n\n\n9:30–10:30 am \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nMichael Hopkins\, Harvard \nTitle: Lattice models and topological quantum field theories I \nAbstract: This series will cover the relationship between gapped Hamiltonian lattice models and topological quantum field theories\, with an emphasis on a conjecture of Kitaev. \n\n\n\n\n10:30–10:45 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n10:45–11:45 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nPieter Naajkens\, Cardiff \nTitle: Introduction to superselection sector theory: Motivation and introduction of basic setting \nAbstract: (week 1 lectures) In this series of lectures\, I will give an introduction to the operator-algebraic (Doplicher-Haag-Roberts) approach to study the superselection sectors of a (2D) gapped quantum spin system. The sectors have a rich mathematical structure of a braided monoidal category. This category describes all the algebraic properties of the ‘anyons’ or ‘charges’ such quantum spin systems can have. The aim of these lectures is to build up this theory from first principles\, using simple examples of topologically ordered models to illustrate the main ideas. If time permits\, I will elaborate on how this fits into the larger programme of the classification of gapped phases of matter\, and long-range entangled states in particular. No prior knowledge of operator algebras or tensor categories is assumed. \nSLIDES (pdf) \n\n\n\n\n11:45 am –12:00 pm \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n12:00–1:00 pm \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nAlexei Kitaev\, Caltech \nTitle: Local definitions of gapped Hamiltonians and topological and invertible states I \n\n\n\n\nTuesday\, July 1 \n\n\n\n\n8:00–9:00 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nBruno Nachtergaele\, UC Davis \nTitle: Ground states of quantum lattice systems: Quasilocality: almost local observables and interactions\, Lieb-Robinson bounds\, quasi-adiabatic evolution\, stability I \n\n\n\n\n9:00–9:30 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nBreakfast break \n\n\n\n\n9:30–10:30 am \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nMichael Hopkins\, Harvard \nTitle: Lattice models and topological quantum field theories II \n\n\n\n\n10:30–10:45 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n10:45–11:45 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nPieter Naajkens\, Cardiff \nTitle: Introduction to superselection sector theory: Building the braided (fusion) category of superselection sectors I \nSLIDES (pdf) \n\n\n\n\n11:45 am –12:00 pm \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n12:00–1:00 pm \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nAlexei Kitaev\, Caltech \nTitle: Local definitions of gapped Hamiltonians and topological and invertible states II \n\n\n\n\nWednesday\, July 2 \n\n\n\n\n8:00–9:00 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nBruno Nachtergaele\, UC Davis \nTitle: Ground states of quantum lattice systems: Quantum Entanglement in many-body systems: short-range entangled states\, topological entanglement\, stability II \n\n\n\n\n9:00–9:30 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nBreakfast break \n\n\n\n\n9:30–10:30 am \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nMichael Hopkins\, Harvard \nTitle: Lattice models and topological quantum field theories III \n\n\n\n\n10:30–10:45 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n10:45–11:45 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nPieter Naajkens\, Cardiff \nTitle: Introduction to superselection sector theory: Building the braided (fusion) category of superselection sectors II \nSLIDES (pdf) \n\n\n\n\n11:45 am –12:00 pm \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n12:00–1:00 pm \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nAlexei Kitaev\, Caltech \nTitle: Local definitions of gapped Hamiltonians and topological and invertible states III \n\n\n\n\nThursday\, July 3 \n\n\n\n\n8:00–9:00 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nBruno Nachtergaele\, UC Davis \nTitle: Ground states of quantum lattice systems: Quantum Phase Diagrams: order parameters\, topological invariants\, examples \n\n\n\n\n9:00–9:30 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nBreakfast break \n\n\n\n\n9:30–10:30 am \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nMichael Hopkins\, Harvard \nTitle: Lattice models and topological quantum field theories IV \n\n\n\n\n10:30–10:45 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n10:45–11:45 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nPieter Naajkens\, Cardiff \nTitle: Introduction to superselection sector theory: Classification of phases and long-range entanglement \nSLIDES (pdf) \n\n\n\n\n11:45 am –12:00 pm \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n12:00–1:00 pm \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nAlexei Kitaev\, Caltech \nTitle: Local definitions of gapped Hamiltonians and topological and invertible states IV \n\n\n\n\nNo talks Friday July 4  \n\n\n\n\n  \n\n\n\n\nMonday July 7 \n\n\n\n\n8:00–9:00 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nJackson van Dyke\, TU Munich \nTitle: Moduli spaces of projective 3d TQFTs \nAbstract: A gapped quantum system is well-approximated at low energy by a projective topological field theory. Therefore questions concerning the classification\, symmetries\, and anomalies of gapped quantum systems can be reinterpreted via the homotopy theory of the moduli space of such theories. I will describe a moduli space of 3-dimensional TQFTs\, and the sense in which its homotopy theory informs us about the low energy behavior of gapped systems in 2+1 dimensions. This moduli space depends on the fixed target category: Explicitly\, it is built from the classifying spaces of higher groups of automorphisms of ribbon categories. The emphasis will be on target categories which have convenient algebraic features\, yet are analytically robust enough to allow for boundary/relative theories defined in terms of unitary representations on topological vector spaces. \n\n\n\n\n9:00–9:30 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nBreakfast break \n\n\n\n\n9:30–10:30 am \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nConstantin Teleman\, UC Berkeley \nTitle: Quantizing homotopy types \nAbstract: Kontsevich (90’s) proposed a topological quantization of (sigma-models into) finite homotopy types to top dimensions (d\, d+1). Its enhancement to a `fully extended’ TQFT was described later (Freed\, Hopkins\, Lurie and the speaker) in the target category of iterated algebras. Independently\, Chas and Sullivan constructed a (partially defined) 2-dimensional TQFT (d=1) with target compact oriented manifolds. I will briefly review the features of the finite homotopy theory and its boundary conditions\, with particular interest in Dirichlet conditions; their analogue in Chas-Sullivan theory (older work by Blumberg\, Cohen and the speaker). Finally\, I propose a generalization combining these to a higher-dimensional Chas-Sullivan theory. \nSlides (link) \n\n\n\n\n10:30–10:45 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n10:45–11:45 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nMatthias Ludewig\, University of Greifswald \nTitle: Generalized Kitaev Pairings and Higher Berry curvature in coarse geometry \nAbstract: In Appendix C of his “Anyons” paper\, Kitaev introduced the notion of a “generalized Chern number” for a 2-dimensional system by diving the system in three ordered parts and measuring a signed rotational flux. This construction has since been used by several authors to measure topological non-triviality of a physical system. In recent work with Guo Chuan Thiang\, we observe that the recipe provided by Kitaev can be interpreted in coarse geometry as the pairing of a K-theory class with a coarse cohomology class. A corresponding index theorem then provides a proof that the set of values of this “Kitaev pairing” is always quantized\, as already argued by Kitaev. In our work\, we generalize Kitaev’s definition and the corresponding quantization result to arbitrary dimensions. By replacing a single Hamiltonian with a whole family of Hamiltonians (parametrized by a space X)\, we recover and extend the construction of “Higher Berry curvatures” by Kapustin and Spodyneiko. Given a coarse cohomology class\, we obtain a characteristic class on the parameter space X\, which is integral whenever integrated against a cycle in X that lies in the image of the homological Chern character (so\, in particular\, spheres in X). \n\n\n\n\n11:45 am –12:00 pm \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n12:00–1:00 pm \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nTheo Johnson-Freyd\, Perimeter Institute \nTitle: Some thoughts about the Kapustin–Kitaev cobordism conjecture \nAbstract: In 2013\, Kitaev explained that\, under some reasonable locality hypotheses\, gapped invertible phases of bosonic lattice models in different dimensions are naturally organized into an \Omega-spectrum. The following year\, Kapustin conjectured that this spectrum is dual to a Thom spectrum\, specifically (smooth) oriented bordism MSO\, and that for fermionic lattice models one sees instead the dual to spin bordism. In 2016\, Freed and Hopkins proved Kapustin’s conjecture for invertible phases of continuous unitary QFTs valued in an at-the-time conjectural universal target category. Freed and Hopkins put bordism categories into the statement of the problem\, by working from the beginning with continuous QFTs. Kapustin’s conjecture for lattice models remains open.David Reutter and I\, in ongoing work in progress\, have investigating Kapustin’s conjecture from the perspective of deeper category theory. We have built the universal target category for phases satisfying a finite semisimplicity hypothesis\, and we are working on relaxing finite semisimplicity. We can show that any spectrum of invertible finite-semisimple phases will indeed be dual to a Thom spectrum for some topological group G acting on the spectrum of spheres. For example\, if one looks just at those bosonic phases which can be topologically condensed from the vacuum\, G is almost the (oriented) piecewise linear group\, whose Thom spectrum is the bordism spectrum MSPL is the (oriented) *piecewise* smooth manifolds; the difference between MSPL and MSO is only visible in dimensions 7 and above. I say almost because in fact our G is what you would get if you tried to build MSPL\, but could only make finitary measurements\, which surely is explained by our restriction to condensable semisimple TQFTs. We conjecture that MSPL\, rather than MSO\, classifies invertible gapped phases of bosonic lattice models.The general relation between MSPL and topological phases is explained by a certain “surgery exact sequence” for topological phases that mirrors the surgery sequence for MSPL. By studying this sequence\, we can also answer the question of which invertible phases admit a gapped boundary condition. In particular that only (the trivial phase and) the Arf–Kervaire invariants admit finite-semisimple gapped boundary conditions. \nSLIDES (pdf) \n\n\n\n\nTuesday\, July 8 \n\n\n\n\n8:00–9:00 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nDavid Reutter\, University of Hamburg \nTitle: On the categorical spectrum of topological quantum field theories \nAbstract: As originally suggested by Kitaev\, invertible topological quantum field theories of varying dimensions should assemble into a spectrum/generalized homology theory. A candidate for such a spectrum of invertible TQFTs was proposed by Freed and Hopkins\, with the defining property that (isomorphism classes of) n-dimensional invertible TQFTs are completely determined by their partition functions on closed n-manifolds. More generally\, not-necessarily-invertible TQFTs should assemble into a ‘categorical spectrum’\, an analogue of a spectrum with non-invertible cells at each level. In this talk\, I will explain that there exists a unique such categorical spectrum satisfying a list of reasonable assumptions on the collection of (compact/very finite & discrete) TQFTs; one of these assumptions being that its invertibles agree with Freed and Hopkins’ suggestion. I will explain these assumptions\, sketch how this categorical spectrum looks like in low-dimensions\, outline its construction\, and how it may be used to learn about gapped boundaries of anomaly theories in high dimensions. This is based on work in progress with Theo Johnson-Freyd. \n\n\n\n\n9:00–9:30 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nBreakfast break \n\n\n\n\n9:30–10:30 am \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nAgnes Beaudry\, UC Boulder \nTitle: An algebraic theory of planon-only fracton orders \nAbstract: In this talk\, I will describe an algebraic theory for planon-only abelian fracton orders. These are three-dimensional gapped phases with the property that fractional excitations are abelian particles restricted to move in parallel planes. The fusion and statistics data can be identified with a finitely generated module over a Laurent polynomial ring together with a U(1)-valued quadratic form. These systems thus lend themselves to an elegant algebraic theory which we expect will lead to easily computable phase invariants and a classification. As a starting point\, we establish a necessary condition for physical realizability\, the excitation-detector principle\, which I will explain. We conjecture that this criterion is also sufficient for realizability. I will also discuss preliminary classification results.This talk is based on joint with Michael Hermele\, Wilbur Shirley and Evan Wickenden. \n\n\n\n\n10:30–10:45 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n10:45–11:45 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nJoão Faria Martins\, University of Leeds \nTitle: A categorification of Quinn’s finite total homotopy TQFT with application to TQFTs and once-extended TQFTs derived from discrete higher gauge theory \nAbstract: Quinn’s Finite Total Homotopy TQFT is a topological quantum field theory defined for any dimension n of space\, depending on the choice of a homotopy finite space B. For instance\, B can be the classifying space of a finite group or a finite 2-group.In this talk\, I will report on recent joint work with Tim Porter on once-extended versions of Quinn’s Finite Total Homotopy TQFT\, taking values in the symmetric monoidal bicategory of groupoids\, linear profunctors\, and natural transformations between linear profunctors. The construction works in all dimensions\, yielding (0\,1\,2)-\, (1\,2\,3)-\, and (2\,3\,4)-extended TQFTs\, given a homotopy finite space B. I will  show how to compute these once-extended TQFTs when B is the classifying space of a homotopy 2-type\, represented by a crossed module of groups.Reference: Faria Martins J\, Porter T: “A categorification of Quinn’s finite total homotopy TQFT with application to TQFTs and once-extended TQFTs derived from strict omega-groupoids.” arXiv:2301.02491 [math.CT] \n\n\n\n\n11:45 am –12:00 pm \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n12:00–1:00 pm \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nEmil Prodan\, Yeshiva University \nTitle: Mapping the landscape of frustration-free models \nAbstract: Frustration-free models are of great interest because they are amenable to specialized techniques and their understanding is more complete among the general quantum spin models. In this talk\, I will establish an almost bijective relation between frustration-free families of projections and a subclass of hereditary subalgebras defined by an intrinsic property. This relation sets further synergies between frustration-free models and open projections in double duals\, and subsets of pure states spaces. These connections enable a better understanding of the class of frustration-free models. For example\, the open projections in the double dual derived from frustration-free models is dense in the norm-topology in the space of generic open projections\, thus assuring us that\, for many purposes\, we can choose to work with frustration-free models without losing generality. Furthermore\, the Cuntz semigroup\, originally designed to classify the positive elements of C*-algebra\, has been proven to also classify the open projections. Given the mentioned connections\, we now have a new device to investigate the ground states of quantum spin models. \nSLIDES (pdf) \n\n\n\n\nWednesday\, July 9 \n\n\n\n\n8:00–9:00 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nAlexander Schenkel\, University of Nottingham \nTitle: C*-categorical prefactorization algebras for superselection sectors and topological order \nAbstract: I will present a geometric framework to encode the algebraic structures on the category of superselection sectors of an algebraic quantum field theory on the n-dimensional lattice Z^n. I will show that\, under certain assumptions which are implied by Haag duality\, the monoidal C*-categories of localized superselection sectors carry the structure of a locally constant prefactorization algebra over the category of cone-shaped subsets of Z^n. Employing techniques from higher algebra\, one extracts from this datum an underlying locally constant prefactorization algebra defined on open disks in the cylinder R^1 x S^{n-1}. While the sphere S^{n-1} arises geometrically as the angular coordinates of cones\, the origin of the line R^1 is analytic and rooted in Haag duality. The usual braided (for n=2) or symmetric (for n>2) monoidal C*-categories of superselection sectors are recovered by removing a point of the sphere and using the equivalence between E_n-algebras and locally constant prefactorization algebras defined on open disks in R^n. The non-trivial homotopy groups of spheres induce additional algebraic structures on these E_n-monoidal C*-categories\, which in the simplest case of Z^2 is given by a braided monoidal self-equivalence arising geometrically as a kind of ‘holonomy’ around the circle S^1.This talk is based on joint work with Marco Benini\, Victor Carmona and Pieter Naaijkens. \n\n\n\n\n9:00–9:30 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nBreakfast break \n\n\n\n\n9:30–10:30 am \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nLukasz Fidkowski\, University of Washington \nTitle: Non-invertible bosonic chiral symmetry on the lattice \nAbstract: We construct a Hamiltonian lattice realization of the non-invertible chiral symmetry that mimics an axial rotation at a rational angle in a U(1) gauge theory with bosonic charged matter.  We provide a heuristic argument that this setup allows a symmetric Hamiltonian which flows\, at low energies\, to a known field theory with this symmetry. \n\n\n\n\n10:30–10:45 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n10:45–11:45 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nNils Carqueville\, University of Vienna \nTitle: Gauging categorical symmetries \nAbstract: Orbifold data are categorical symmetries that can be gauged in oriented defect topological quantum field theories. We review the general construction and apply it to 2-group symmetries of 3-dimensional TQFTs; upon further specialisation this leads to equivariantisation of G-crossed braided fusion categories. We also describe a proposal\, via higher dagger categories\, to gauging categorical symmetries in the context of other tangential structures. This is based on separate projects with Benjamin Haake and Tim Lüders. \n\n\n\n\n11:45 am –12:00 pm \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n12:00–1:00 pm \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nNikita Sopenko\, IAS \nTitle: Reflection positivity and invertible phases of 2d quantum many-body systems \nAbstract: Reflection positivity is a property that is usually taken as an assumption in the classification of topological phases of matter via continuous quantum field theories. For general quantum many-body systems\, this property does not hold. This raises the question of whether it somehow emerges in the effective theory from the microscopic description\, thereby justifying the field-theoretic approach.In this talk\, I will discuss reflection positivity in the context of invertible phases of two-dimensional lattice systems. I will explain why every such phase admits a reflection-positive representative\, and why inverse phases are represented by complex conjugate states. I will also introduce an index that distinguishes these phases and is conjecturally related to the chiral central charge. \n\n\n\n\nThursday\, July 10 \n\n\n\n\n8:00–9:00 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nIlka Brunner\, Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich \nTitle: Defects as functors between phases of Abelian gauged linear sigma models \nAbstract: Defects act naturally on boundary conditions\, providing functors between D-brane categories. In the context of gauged linear sigma models\, one can use defects to transport branes from one phase to another. In this talk\, I will show how to construct such defects explicitly. \n\n\n\n\n9:00–9:30 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nBreakfast break \n\n\n\n\n9:30–10:30 am \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nDavid Penneys\, Ohio State \nTitle: Holography for bulk-boundary local topological order \nAbstract: In previous joint work [arXiv:2307.12552] with C. Jones\, Naaijkins and Wallick\, we introduced local topological order (LTO) axioms for quantum spin systems which allowed us to define a physical boundary manifested by a net of boundary algebras in one dimension lower. This gives a formal setting for topological holography\, where the braided tensor category of DHR bimodules of the physical boundary algebra captures the bulk topological order.In joint work with C. Jones and Naaijkens\, we extend the LTO axioms to quantum spin systems equipped with a topological boundary\, again producing a physical boundary algebra for the bulk-boundary system\, whose category of (topological) boundary DHR bimodules recovers the topological boundary order. We perform this analysis in explicit detail for Levin-Wen and Walker-Wang bulk-boundary systems.Along the way\, we introduce a 2D braided categorical net of algebras built from a unitary braided fusion category (UBFC)\, which arise as boundary algebras of Walker-Wang models. We consider the canonical state on this braided categorical net corresponding to the standard topological boundary for the Walker-Wang model. Interestingly\, in this state\, the cone von Neumann algebras are type I with finite dimensional centers\, in contrast with the type II and III cone von Neumann algebras from the Levin-Wen models studied in [arXiv:2307.12552]. Their superselection sectors recover the underlying unitary category of our UBFC\, and we conjecture the superselection category also captures the fusion and braiding. \n\n\n\n\n10:30–10:45 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n10:45–11:45 am \n\n\nMPIM \n\n\nChristoph Schweigert\, University of Hamburg \nTitle: Tensor network states: a topological field theory perspective. \nAbstract: Projected entangled pair states (PEPS) and matrix product operators (MPO) are standard tools in quantum information theory and quantum many-body physics. We explain how to understand them in terms of Turaev-Viro models on manifolds with boundary. We then sketch how a recently developed categorical Morita theory for spherical module categories can be used to find generalizations of the standard PEPS tensors. \n\n\n\n\n11:45 am –12:00 pm \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n12:00–1:00 pm \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nGreg Moore\, Rutgers \nTitle: p-form puzzles \nAbstract: It is commonly stated that level k BF theory for a p-form (and a form of complementary dimension) is equivalent to a homotopy sigma model with target space K(A\,p) where A is a cyclic group of order k.  Some aspects of this standard statement are puzzling me. I’ll explain what they are. (Perhaps someone in the audience can resolve my puzzles.) Then I’ll revisit the (again standard) electromagnetic duality of p-form electrodynamics. The conclusion will be that a slightly modified version of Ray-Singer torsion is the partition function of an invertible topological field theory. \n\n\n\n\nFriday\, July 11Note: On Friday\, there will be separate schedules for Bonn and CMSA. \nTo view the Bonn schedule\, please visit the program page at: https://www.mpim-bonn.mpg.de/qft25 \n\n\n\n\n8:00–9:00 am \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nMarkus Pflaum\, UC Boulder \nTitle: A tour d’horizon through homotopical aspects of C*-algebraic quantum spin systems \nAbstract: In the talk I report on joint work with Beaudry\, Hermele\, Moreno\, Qi and Spiegel\, where a homotopy theoretic framework for studying state spaces of quantum lattice spin systems has been introduced using the language of C*-algebraic quantum mechanics. First some old and new results about the state space of the quasi-local algebra of a quantum lattice spin system when endowed with either the natural metric topology or the weak* topology will be presented. Switching to the algebraic topological side\, the homotopy groups of the unitary group of a UHF algebra will then be determined and it will be indicated that the pure state space of any UHF algebra in the weak* topology is weakly contractible. In addition\, I will show at the example of non-commutative tori that also in the case of a not commutative C*-algebra\, the homotopy type of the state space endowed with the weak* topology can be non-trivial and is neither deformation nor Morita invariant. Finally\, I indicate how such tools together with methods from higher homotopy theory such as E_infinity spaces may lead to a framework for constructing Kitaev’s loop-spectrum of bosonic invertible gapped phases of matter. \n\n\n\n\n9:00–9:30 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nBreakfast break \n\n\n\n\n9:30–11:00 am \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nSpeed Talks \nBen Gripaios\, University of CambridgeTitle: Locality and smoothness of QFTs \nCarolyn Zhang\, Harvard UniversityTitle: SymTFT approach for (non-)invertible symmetries of mixed states \nRoman Geiko\, UCLATitle: Omega-spectrum of stabilizer invertible phases \n\n\n\n\n11:00–11:15 am \n\n\n  \n\n\nbreak \n\n\n\n\n11:15–12:45 pm \n\n\nCMSA \n\n\nSpeed Talks continued \nEric Roon\, Michigan State UniversityTitle: Finitely Correlated States Driven by Topological Dynamics \nDmitri Pavlov\, Texas Tech UniversityTitle: The classification of two-dimensional extended conformal field theories \nBowen Shi\, University of Illinois Urbana-ChampaignTitle: Mathematical Puzzles from the Entanglement Bootstrap: On Immersions and regular homotopySLIDES (pdf) \n\n\n\n\n  \n 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/mpqft25/
LOCATION:Hybrid
CATEGORIES:Event,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/QFT_2025.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250903T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250903T173000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20250729T195223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250805T182154Z
UID:10003758-1756915200-1756920600@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Fall CMSA Welcome Event
DESCRIPTION:Fall CMSA Welcome Event \nDate: September 3\, 2025 \nTime: 4:00 pm \nLocation: CMSA Common Room\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge MA \n  \nAll CMSA and Math affiliates are invited. \n 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/welcome925/
LOCATION:CMSA 20 Garden Street Cambridge\, Massachusetts 02138 United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/CMSA_Wwlecome-2023-IMG_9367.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250908T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250910T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20250502T174228Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260422T141418Z
UID:10003660-1757322000-1757523600@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Math and Machine Learning Reunion Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Math and Machine Learning Reunion Workshop \nDates: September 8–10\, 2025 \nLocation: Harvard CMSA\, Room G10\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge MA \nMachine learning and AI are increasingly important tools in all fields of research. In the fall of 2024\, the CMSA Mathematics and Machine Learning Program hosted 70 mathematicians and machine learning experts\, ranging from beginners to established leaders in their field\, to explore ML as a research tool for mathematicians\, and mathematical approaches to understanding ML. More than 20 papers came out of projects started and developed during the program. The MML Reunion workshop will be an opportunity for the participants to share their results\, review subsequent developments\, and develop directions for future research. \nInvited Speakers \n\nAngelica Babei\, Howard University\nGergely Bérczi\, Aarhus University\nJoanna Bieri\, University of Redlands\nGiorgi Butbaia\, University of New Hampshire\nRandy Davila\, RelationalAI\, Rice University\nAlyson Deines\, IDA/CCR La Jolla\nSergei Gukov\, Caltech\nYang-Hui He\, University of Oxford\nMark Hughes\, Brigham Young University\nKyu-Hwan Lee\, University of Connecticut\nEric Mjolsness\, UC Irvine\nMaria Prat Colomer\, Brown University\nSébastien Racanière\, Google DeepMind\nEric Ramos\, Stevens Institute of Technology\nTamara Veenstra\, IDA-CCR La Jolla\n\nOrganizer:Michael Douglas\, CMSA \n\nSchedule \nMonday Sep. 8\, 2025 \n\n\n\n9:00–9:30 am\nMorning refreshments\n\n\n9:30–9:45 am\nIntroductions\n\n\n9:45–10:45 am\nAngelica Babei\, Howard University\nTitle: Predicting Euler factors of elliptic curves\nAbstract: Two non-isogenous elliptic curves will have distinct traces of Frobenius at a large enough prime\, and a finite set of $a_p(E)$ values determines all others. However\, even when enough $a_p(E)$ values are provided to uniquely identify the isogeny class\, no efficient algorithm is known for determining the remaining $a_p(E)$ values from this finite set. Preliminary results show that ML models can learn to predict the next trace of Frobenius with a surprising degree of accuracy from relatively few nearby entries. We investigate some possible reasons for this performance. Based on joint work with François Charton\, Edgar Costa\, Xiaoyu Huang\, Kyu-Hwan Lee\, David Lowry-Duda\, Ashvni Narayanan\, and Alexey Pozdnyakov.\n\n\n10:45–11:00 am\nBreak\n\n\n11:00 am–12:00 pm\nKyu-Hwan Lee\, University of Connecticut\nTitle: Machine learning mutation-acyclicity of quivers\n\n\n12:00–1:30 pm\nLunch\n\n\n1:30–2:30 pm\nGergely Bérczi\, Aarhus University\nTitle: Diffusion Models for Sphere Packings\n\n\n2:30–2:45 pm\nBreak\n\n\n2:45–3:45 pm\nRandy Davila\, RelationalAI\, Rice University\nTitle: Recent Developments in Automated Conjecturing\nAbstract: The dream of a machine capable of generating deep mathematical insight has inspired decades of research—from Fajtlowicz’s Graffiti program in graph theory and chemistry to DeepMind’s neural breakthroughs in knot theory. In this talk\, we briefly trace the evolution of automated conjecturing systems and present recent advances that deepen our understanding of what it means for machines to conjecture—a pursuit long embodied by our system\, TxGraffiti. Building on this legacy\, we introduce a new framework that integrates optimization\, enumeration\, and convex geometric methods with creative heuristics and symbolic translation. This extended system produces not only conjectured inequalities\, but also necessary and sufficient condition statements\, which can then be automatically ranked by IRIS (Inequality Ranking and Inference System) model and translated into Lean 4 for formal verification. The result is a flexible architecture capable of generating precise\, human-readable\, and logically rigorous conjectures with minimal manual intervention.\nWe showcase results across a range of mathematical areas\, including graph theory\, polyhedral theory\, number theory\, and—for the first time—conjectures in string theory\, derived from the dataset of complete intersection Calabi–Yau (CICY) threefolds. Together\, these developments suggest that with the right blend of structure\, strategy\, and aesthetic\, machines can generate conjectures that not only withstand scrutiny but invite it—offering a glimpse into a future where AI contributes meaningfully to the creative process of mathematics.\n\n\n3:45–4:00 pm\nBreak\n\n\n4:00–5:00 pm\nEric Ramos\, Stevens Institute of Technology\nTitle: An AI approach to a conjecture of Erdos\nAbstract: Given a graph G\, its independence sequence is the integral sequence a_1\,a_2\,…\,a_n\, where a_i is the number of independent sets of vertices of size i. In the 90’s Erdos and coauthors showed that this sequence need not be unimodal for general graphs\, but conjectured that it is always unimodal whenever G is a tree. This conjecture was then naturally generalized to claim that the independence sequence of trees should be log concave\, in the sense that a_i^2 is always above a_{i-1}a_{i+1}. This stronger version of the conjecture was shown to hold for all trees of at most 25 vertices. In 2023\, however\, using improved computational power and a considerably more efficient algorithm\, Kadrawi\, Levit\, Yosef\, and Mirzrachi proved that there were exactly two trees on 26 vertices whose independence sequence was not log concave. They also showed how these two examples could be generalized to create two families of trees whose members are all not log concave. Finally\, in early 2025\, Galvin provided a family of trees with the property that for any chosen positive integer k\, there is a member T of the family where log concavity breaks at index alpha(T) – k\, where alph(T) is the independence number of T. Outside of these three families\, not much else was known about what causes log concavity to break.In this presentation\, I will discuss joint work of myself and Shiqi Sun\, where we used the PatternBoost architecture to train a machine to find counter-examples to the log concavity conjecture. We will discuss the successes of this approach – finding tens of thousands of new counter-examples with vertex set sizes varying from 27 to 101 – and some of its fascinating failures.\n\n\n\n  \nTuesday\, Sep. 9\, 2025 \n\n\n\n9:00–9:30 am\nMorning refreshments\n\n\n9:30–10:30 am\nMaria Prat Colomer\, Brown University\nTitle: From PINNs to Computer-Assisted Proofs for Fluid Dynamics\nAbstract: Physics-Informed Neural Networks (PINNs) have emerged as an alternative to traditional numerical methods for solving partial differential equations (PDEs). We apply PINNs to the study of low regularity problems in fluid dynamics\, focusing on the incompressible 2D Euler equations. In particular\, we study V-states\, which are a class of weak\, non-smooth solutions for which the vorticity is the characteristic function of a domain that rotates with constant angular velocity. We have obtained an approximate solution of a limiting V-state using a PINN and we are currently working on a rigourous proof of the existence of a nearby solution through a computer-assisted proof. Our PINN-based numerical approximation significantly improves on traditional methods\, a key factor being the integration of prior mathematical knowledge of the problem to effectively explore the solution space.\n\n\n10:30–11:00 am\nBreak\n\n\n11:00 am–12:00 pm\nSebastian Racaniere\, Google DeepMind\nTitle: Generative models and high dimensional symmetries: the case of Lattice QCD\nAbstract: Applying normalizing flows\, a machine learning technique for mapping distributions\, to Lattice QCD offers a promising route to enhance simulations and overcome limitations of traditional methods like Hybrid Monte Carlo. LQCD aims to compute expectation values of observables from an intractable distribution defined over a lattice of fields. Normalizing flows can learn this complex distribution and generate new configurations\, improving efficiency and addressing challenges such as critical slowing down and topological freezing. Topological freezing\, in particular\, traps simulations in local minima and prevents exploration of the full configuration space\, affecting accuracy. This approach incorporates the symmetries of LQCD through gauge equivariant flows\, leading to successful definitions and good effective sample sizes on smaller lattices. Beyond accelerating configuration generation\, normalizing flows also find application in variance reduction for observable calculation and exploring phenomena at different scales within LQCD. While further research is needed to apply these methods at the scale of state-of-the-art LQCD calculations\, these advancements hold significant potential to improve the accuracy\, efficiency\, and reach of future simulations.\n\n\n12:00–1:30 pm\nLunch break\n\n\n1:30–2:30 pm\nSergei Gukov\, Caltech\nTitle: On sparse reward problems in mathematics\nAbstract: An alternative title for this talk could be “Learning Hardness.” To see why\, we will explore some long-standing open problems in mathematics and examine what makes them hard from a computational perspective. We will argue that\, in many cases\, the difficulty arises from a highly uneven distribution of hardness within families of related problems\, where the truly hard cases lie far out in the tail. We will then discuss how recent advances in AI may provide new tools to tackle these challenges. Based in part on the recent work with A.Shehper\, A.Medina-Mardones\, L.Fagan\, B.Lewandowski\, A.Gruen\, Y.Qiu\, P.Kucharski\, and Z.Wang.\n\n\n2:30–2:45 pm\nBreak\n\n\n2:45–3:45 pm\nAlyson Deines\, IDA-CCR La Jolla; Tamara Veenstra\, IDA-CCR La Jolla; Joanna Bieri\, University of Redlands\nTitle: Machine learning $L$-functions\nAbstract: We study the vanishing order of rational $L$-functions and Maass form $L$-functions from a data scientific perspective. Each $L$-function is represented by finitely many Dirichlet coefficients\, the normalization of which depends on the context. We observe murmurations by averaging over these datasets. For rational $L$-functions\, we find that PCA clusters rational $L$-functions by their vanishing order and record that LDA and neural networks may accurately predict this quantity. For Maass form $L$-functions\, while PCA does not cluster these $L$-functions\, we still find that LDA and neural networks may accurately predict this quantity.\n\n\n3:45–4:00 pm\nBreak\n\n\n4:00–5:00 pm\nMark Hughes\, Brigham Young University\nTitle: Modelling the concordance group via contrastive learning\nAbstract: The concordance group of knots in 3-space is an abelian group formed by the equivalence classes of knots under the relation of concordance\, where two knots are concordant if they are the boundary of a smooth annulus properly embedded in the 4-dimensional product space S^3 x I. Though studied since 1966\, properties of the concordance groups (and even the recognition problem of deciding when a knot is null-concordant\, or slice) are difficult to study. In this talk I will outline ongoing attempts to model the concordance group using contrastive learning. This is joint work with Onkar Singh Gujral.\n\n\n\n  \n  \nWednesday Sep. 10\, 2025 \n\n\n\n9:00–9:30 am\nMorning refreshments\n\n\n9:30–10:30 am\nYang-Hui He\, University of Oxford (Via Zoom)\nTitle: AI for Mathematics: Bottom-up\, Top-Down\, Meta-\nAbstract: We argue how AI can assist mathematics in three ways: theorem-proving\, conjecture formulation\, and language processing. Inspired by initial experiments in geometry and string theory in 2017\, we summarize how this emerging field has grown over the past years\, and show how various machine-learning algorithms can help with pattern detection across disciplines ranging from algebraic geometry to representation theory\, to combinatorics\, and to number theory. At the heart of the programme is the question how does AI help with theoretical discovery\, and the implications for the future of mathematics.\n\n\n10:30–11:00 am\nBreak\n\n\n11:00 am–12:00 pm\nGiorgi Butbaia\, University of New Hampshire\nTitle: Computational String Theory using Machine Learning\nAbstract: Calabi-Yau compactifications of the $E_8\times E_8$ heterotic string provide a promising route to recovering the four-dimensional particle physics described by the Standard Model. While the topology of the Calabi-Yau space determines the overall matter content in the low-energy effective field theory\, further details of the compactification geometry are needed to calculate the normalized physical couplings and masses of elementary particles. In this talk\, we present novel numerical techniques for computing physically normalized Yukawa couplings in a number of heterotic models in the standard embedding using geometric machine learning and equivariant neural networks. We observe that the results produced using these techniques are in excellent agreement with the expected values for certain special cases\, where the answers are known. In the case of the Tian-Yau manifold\, which defines a model with three generations and has $h^{2\,1}>1$\, we provide a first-of-its-kind calculation of the normalized Yukawa couplings. As part of this work\, we have developed a Python library called cymyc\, which streamlines calculation of the Calabi-Yau metric and the Yukawa couplings on arbitrary Calabi-Yau manifolds that are realized as complete intersections and provides a framework for studying the differential geometric properties\, such as the curvature.\n\n\n12:00–1:30 pm\nLunch break\n\n\n1:30–2:30 pm\nEric Mjolsness\, UC Irvine\nTitle: Graph operators for science-applied AI/ML\nAbstract: Scalable\, structured graphs play a central role in mathematical problem definition for scientific applications of artificial intelligence and machine learning. Qualitatively diverse kinds of operators are necessary to bring these graphs to life. Continuous-time processes govern the evolution of spatial graph embeddings and other graph-local differential equation systems\, as well as the flow of probability between locally similar graph structures in a probabilistic Fock space\, according to rules in a dynamical graph grammar (DGG). Both kinds of dynamics have biophysical application eg. to dynamic cytoskeleton\, and both obey graph-centric time-evolution operators in an operator algebra that can be differentiated for learning. On the other hand coarse-scale discrete jumps in graph structure such as global mesh refinement can be modeled with a “graph lineage”: a sequence of sparsely interrelated graphs whose size grows roughly exponentially with level number. Graph lineages permit the definition of substantially more cost-efficient skeletal graph products\, as versions of classic binary graph operators such as the Cartesian product and direct product of graphs\, with analogous but not identical properties. Application to deep neural networks and to multigrid numerical methods are shown.\nThese two graph operator frameworks are interrelated. Further graph lineage operators allow the definition of graph frontier spaces\, accommodating graph grammars and supporting the definition of skeletal graph-graph function spaces. In return\, “confluent” graph grammars e.g. for adaptive mesh generation permit the definition of graph lineages through iteration. I will also sketch the design of compatible AI for Science systems that may exploit DGGs.\nJoint work with Cory Scott and Matthew Hur.\n\n\n2:30–3:00 pm\nBreak\n\n\n3:00–5:00 pm\nPanel and Discussion Group: Jordan Ellenberg\, Tamara Veenstra\, Sébastien Racaniere\, Kyu-Hwan Lee\, Sergei Gukov\n\n\n\n  \n\n  \n  \n 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/mml_2025/
LOCATION:CMSA 20 Garden Street Cambridge\, Massachusetts 02138 United States
CATEGORIES:Event,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/MML_Reunion_poster.2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250911T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250912T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20250502T175902Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251026T044243Z
UID:10003743-1757581200-1757696400@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Big Data Conference 2025
DESCRIPTION:Big Data Conference 2025 \nDates: Sep. 11–12\, 2025 \nLocation: Harvard University CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge & via Zoom \nThe Big Data Conference features speakers from the Harvard community as well as scholars from across the globe\, with talks focusing on computer science\, statistics\, math and physics\, and economics. \nInvited Speakers \n\nMarkus J. Buehler\, MIT\nYiling Chen\, Harvard\nJordan Ellenberg\, UW Madison\nYue M. Lu\, Harvard\nPankaj Mehta\, BU\nNick Patterson\, Harvard\nGautam Reddy\, Princeton\nTrevor David Rhone\, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute\nTess Smidt\, MIT\n\nOrganizers: \nMichael M. Desai\, Harvard OEB |  Michael R. Douglas\, Harvard CMSA | Yannai A. Gonczarowski\, Harvard Economics | Efthimios Kaxiras\, Harvard Physics | Melanie Weber\, Harvard SEAS \n  \nBig Data Youtube Playlist \n  \nSchedule \nThursday\, Sep. 11\, 2025 \n  \n\n\n\n9:00 am\nRefreshments\n\n\n9:30 am\nIntroductions\n\n\n9:45–10:45 am\nGautam Reddy\, Princeton \nTitle: Global epistasis in genotype-phenotype maps\n\n\n10:45–11:00 am\nBreak\n\n\n11:00 am –12:00 pm\nNick Patterson\, Harvard \nTitle: The Origin of the Indo-Europeans \nAbstract: Indo-European is the largest family of human languages\, with very wide geographical distribution and more than 3 billion native speakers. How did this family arise and spread? This question has been discussed for nearly 250 years but with the advent of the availability of DNA from ancient fossils is now largely understood\, at least in broad outlines. We will describe what we now know about the origins.\n\n\n12:00–1:30 pm\nLunch break\n\n\n1:30–2:30 pm\nMarkus Buehler\, MIT \nTitle: Superintelligence for scientific discovery \nAbstract: AI is moving beyond prediction to become a partner in invention. While today’s models excel at interpolating within known data\, true discovery requires stepping outside existing truths. This talk introduces superintelligent discovery engines built on multi-agent swarms: diverse AI agents that interact\, compete\, and cooperate to generate structured novelty. Guided by Gödel’s insight that no closed system is complete\, these swarms create gradients of difference – much like temperature gradients in thermodynamics – that sustain flow\, invention\, and surprise. Case studies in protein design and music composition show how swarms escape data biases\, invent novel structures\, and weave long-range coherence\, producing creativity that rivals human processes. By moving from “big data” to “big insight”\, these systems point toward a new era of AI that composes knowledge across science\, engineering\, and the arts.\n\n\n2:30–2:45 pm\nBreak\n\n\n2:45–3:45 pm\nJordan Ellenberg\, UW Madison \nTitle: What does machine learning have to offer mathematics?\n\n\n3:45–4:00 pm\nBreak\n\n\n4:00–5:00 pm\nPankaj Mehta\, Boston University \nTitle: Thinking about high-dimensional biological data in the age of AI \nAbstract: The molecular biology revolution has transformed our view of living systems. Scientific explanations of biological phenomena are now synonymous with the identification of the genes and proteins. The preeminence of the molecular paradigm has only become more pronounced as new technologies allow us to make measurements at scale. Combining this wealth of data with new artificial intelligence (AI) techniques is widely viewed as the future of biology. Here\, I will discuss the promise and perils of this approach. I will focus on our unpublished work with collaborators on two fronts: (i) transformer-based models for understanding genotype-to-phenotype maps\, and (ii) LLM-based ‘foundational models’ for cellular identity\, such as TranscriptFormer\, which is trained on single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) data. While LLMs excel at capturing complex evolutionary and demographic structure in DNA sequence data\, they are much less adept at elucidating the biology of cellular identity. We show that simple parameter-free models based on linear-algebra outperform TranscriptFormer on downstream tasks related to cellular identity\, even though TranscriptFormer has nearly a billion parameters. If time permits\, I will conclude by showing how we can combine ideas from linear algebra\, bifurcation theory\, and statistical physics to classify cell fate transitions using scRNAseq data.\n\n\n\n  \nFriday\, Sep. 12\, 2025  \n\n\n\n9:00-9:45 am\nRefreshments\n\n\n9:45–10:45 am\nYiling Chen\, Harvard \nTitle: Data Reliability Scoring \nAbstract: Imagine you are trying to make a data-driven decision\, but the data at hand may be noisy\, biased\, or even strategically manipulated. Can you assess whether such a dataset is reliable—without access to ground truth?\nWe initiate the study of reliability scoring for datasets reported by potentially strategic data sources. While the true data remain unobservable\, we assume access to auxiliary observations generated by an unknown statistical process that depends on the truth. We introduce the Gram Determinant Score\, a reliability measure that evaluates how well the reported data align with the unobserved truth\, using only the reported data and the auxiliary observations. The score comes with provable guarantees: it preserves several natural reliability orderings. Experimentally\, it effectively captures data quality in settings with synthetic noise and contrastive learning embeddings.\nThis talk is based on joint work with Shi Feng\, Fang-Yi Yu\, and Paul Kattuman.\n\n\n10:45–11:00 am\nBreak\n\n\n11:00 am –12:00 pm\nYue M. Lu\, Harvard \nTitle: Nonlinear Random Matrices in High-Dimensional Estimation and Learning \nAbstract: In recent years\, new classes of structured random matrices have emerged in statistical estimation and machine learning. Understanding their spectral properties has become increasingly important\, as these matrices are closely linked to key quantities such as the training and generalization performance of large neural networks and the fundamental limits of high-dimensional signal recovery. Unlike classical random matrix ensembles\, these new matrices often involve nonlinear transformations\, introducing additional structural dependencies that pose challenges for traditional analysis techniques. \nIn this talk\, I will present a set of equivalence principles that establish asymptotic connections between various nonlinear random matrix ensembles and simpler linear models that are more tractable for analysis. I will then demonstrate how these principles can be applied to characterize the performance of kernel methods and random feature models across different scaling regimes and to provide insights into the in-context learning capabilities of attention-based Transformer networks.\n\n\n12:00–1:30 pm\nLunch break\n\n\n1:30–2:30 pm\nTrevor David Rhone\, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute \nTitle: Accelerating the discovery of van der Waals quantum materials using AI \nAbstract: van der Waals (vdW) materials are exciting platforms for studying emergent quantum phenomena\, ranging from long-range magnetic order to topological order. A conservative estimate for the number of candidate vdW materials exceeds ~106 for monolayers and ~1012 for heterostructures. How can we accelerate the exploration of this entire space of materials? Can we design quantum materials with desirable properties\, thereby advancing innovation in science and technology? A recent study showed that artificial intelligence (AI) can be harnessed to discover new vdW Heisenberg ferromagnets based on Cr2Ge2Te6 [1]\, [2] and magnetic vdW topological insulators based on MnBi2Te4 [3]. In this talk\, we will harness AI to efficiently explore the large chemical space of vdW materials and to guide the discovery of vdW materials with desirable spin and charge properties. We will focus on crystal structures based on monolayer Cr2I6 of the form A2X6\, which are studied using density functional theory (DFT) calculations and AI. Magnetic properties\, such as the magnetic moment are determined. The formation energy is also calculated and used as a proxy for the chemical stability. We also investigate monolayers based on MnBi2Te4 of the form AB2X4 to identify novel topological materials. Further to this\, we study heterostructures based on MnBi2Te4/Sb2Te3 stacks. We show that AI\, combined with DFT\, can provide a computationally efficient means to predict the thermodynamic and magnetic properties of vdW materials [4]\,[5]. This study paves the way for the rapid discovery of chemically stable vdW quantum materials with applications in spintronics\, magnetic memory and novel quantum computing architectures.\n[1]        T. D. Rhone et al.\, “Data-driven studies of magnetic two-dimensional materials\,” Sci. Rep.\, vol. 10\, no. 1\, p. 15795\, 2020.\n[2]        Y. Xie\, G. Tritsaris\, O. Granas\, and T. Rhone\, “Data-Driven Studies of the Magnetic Anisotropy of Two-Dimensional Magnetic Materials\,” J. Phys. Chem. Lett.\, vol. 12\, no. 50\, pp. 12048–12054.\n[3]        R. Bhattarai\, P. Minch\, and T. D. Rhone\, “Investigating magnetic van der Waals materials using data-driven approaches\,” J. Mater. Chem. C\, vol. 11\, p. 5601\, 2023.\n[4]        T. D. Rhone et al.\, “Artificial Intelligence Guided Studies of van der Waals Magnets\,” Adv. Theory Simulations\, vol. 6\, no. 6\, p. 2300019\, 2023.\n[5]        P. Minch\, R. Bhattarai\, K. Choudhary\, and T. D. Rhone\, “Predicting magnetic properties of van der Waals magnets using graph neural networks\,” Phys. Rev. Mater.\, vol. 8\, no. 11\, p. 114002\, Nov. 2024.\nThis work used the Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment (XSEDE)\, which is supported by National Science Foundation Grant No. ACI-1548562. This research used resources of the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility\, which is a DOE Office of Science User Facility supported under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357. This material is based on work supported by the National Science Foundation CAREER award under Grant No. 2044842.\n\n\n2:30–2:45 pm\nBreak\n\n\n2:45–3:45 pm\nTess Smidt\, MIT \nTitle: Applications of Euclidean neural networks to understand and design atomistic systems \nAbstract: Atomic systems (molecules\, crystals\, proteins\, etc.) are naturally represented by a set of coordinates in 3D space labeled by atom type. This poses a challenge for machine learning due to the sensitivity of coordinates to 3D rotations\, translations\, and inversions (the symmetries of 3D Euclidean space). Euclidean symmetry-equivariant Neural Networks (E(3)NNs) are specifically designed to address this issue. They faithfully capture the symmetries of physical systems\, handle 3D geometry\, and operate on the scalar\, vector\, and tensor fields that characterize these systems. \nE(3)NNs have achieved state-of-the-art results across atomistic benchmarks\, including small-molecule property prediction\, protein-ligand binding\, force prediciton for crystals\, molecules\, and heterogeneous catalysis. By merging neural network design with group representation theory\, they provide a principled way to embed physical symmetries directly into learning. In this talk\, I will survey recent applications of E(3)NNs to materials design and highlight ongoing debates in the AI for atomistic sciences community: how to balance the incorporation of physical knowledge with the drive for engineering efficiency.\n\n\n\n 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/bigdata_2025/
LOCATION:CMSA Room G10\, CMSA\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138\, United States
CATEGORIES:Big Data Conference,Conference,Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/Big-Data-2025_11x17.9-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250915T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250918T170000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20250710T134311Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250930T154307Z
UID:10003755-1757926800-1758214800@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:The Geometry of Machine Learning
DESCRIPTION:The Geometry of Machine Learning \nDates: September 15–18\, 2025 \nLocation: Harvard CMSA\, Room G10\, 20 Garden Street\, Cambridge MA 02138 \nDespite the extraordinary progress in large language models\, mathematicians suspect that other dimensions of intelligence must be defined and simulated to complete the picture. Geometric and symbolic reasoning are among these. In fact\, there seems to be much to learn about existing ML by considering it from a geometric perspective\, e.g. what is happening to the data manifold as it moves through a NN?  How can geometric and symbolic tools be interfaced with LLMs? A more distant goal\, one that seems only approachable through AIs\, would be to gain some insight into the large-scale structure of mathematics as a whole: the geometry of math\, rather than geometry as a subject within math. This conference is intended to begin a discussion on these topics. \nSpeakers \n\nMaissam Barkeshli\, University of Maryland\nEve Bodnia\, Logical Intelligence\nAdam Brown\, Stanford\nBennett Chow\, USCD & IAS\nMichael Freedman\, Harvard CMSA\nElliot Glazer\, Epoch AI\nJames Halverson\, Northeastern\nJesse Han\, Math Inc.\nJunehyuk Jung\, Brown University\nAlex Kontorovich\, Rutgers University\nYann Lecun\, New York University & META*\nJared Duker Lichtman\, Stanford  & Math Inc.\nBrice Ménard\, Johns Hopkins\nMichael Mulligan\, UCR & Logical Intelligence\nPatrick Shafto\, DARPA & Rutgers University\n\nOrganizers: Michael R. Douglas (CMSA) and Mike Freedman (CMSA) \n  \nGeometry of Machine Learning Youtube Playlist \n  \nSchedule \nMonday\, Sep. 15\, 2025 \n\n\n\n8:30–9:00 am\nMorning refreshments\n\n\n9:00–10:00 am\nJames Halverson\, Northeastern \nTitle: Sparsity and Symbols with Kolmogorov-Arnold Networks \nAbstract: In this talk I’ll review Kolmogorov-Arnold nets\, as well as new theory and applications related to sparsity and symbolic regression\, respectively.  I’ll review essential results regarding KANs\, show how sparsity masks relate deep nets and KANs\, and how KANs can be utilized alongside multimodal language models for symbolic regression. Empirical results will necessitate a few slides\, but the bulk will be chalk.\n\n\n10:00–10:30 am\nBreak\n\n\n10:30–11:30 am\nMaissam Barkeshli\, University of Maryland \nTitle: Transformers and random walks: from language to random graphs \nAbstract: The stunning capabilities of large language models give rise to many questions about how they work and how much more capable they can possibly get. One way to gain additional insight is via synthetic models of data with tunable complexity\, which can capture the basic relevant structures of real data. In recent work we have focused on sequences obtained from random walks on graphs\, hypergraphs\, and hierarchical graphical structures. I will present some recent empirical results for work in progress regarding how transformers learn sequences arising from random walks on graphs. The focus will be on neural scaling laws\, unexpected temperature-dependent effects\, and sample complexity.\n\n\n11:30 am–12:00 pm\nBreak\n\n\n12:00–1:00 pm\nAdam Brown\, Stanford \nTitle: LLMs\, Reasoning\, and the Future of Mathematical Sciences \nAbstract: Over the last half decade\, the mathematical capabilities of large language models (LLMs) have leapt from preschooler to undergraduate and now beyond. This talk reviews recent progress\, and speculates as to what it will mean for the future of mathematical sciences if these trends continue.\n\n\n\n  \nTuesday\, Sep. 16\, 2025 \n\n\n\n8:30–9:00 am\nMorning refreshments\n\n\n9:00–10:00 am\nJunehyuk Jung\, Brown University \nTitle: AlphaGeometry: a step toward automated math reasoning \nAbstract: Last summer\, Google DeepMind’s AI systems made headlines by achieving Silver Medal level performance on the notoriously challenging International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) problems. For instance\, AlphaGeometry 2\, one of these remarkable systems\, solved the geometry problem in a mere 19 seconds! \nIn this talk\, we will delve into the inner workings of AlphaGeometry\, exploring the innovative techniques that enable it to tackle intricate geometric puzzles. We will uncover how this AI system combines the power of neural networks with symbolic reasoning to discover elegant solutions.\n\n\n10:00–10:30 am\nBreak\n\n\n10:30–11:30 am\nBennett Chow\, USCD and IAS \nTitle: Ricci flow as a test for AI\n\n\n11:30 am–12:00 pm\nBreak\n\n\n12:00–1:00 pm\nJared Duker Lichtman\, Stanford & Math Inc. and Jesse Han\, Math Inc. \nTitle: Gauss – towards autoformalization for the working mathematician \nAbstract: In this talk we’ll highlight some recent formalization progress using a new agent – Gauss. We’ll outline a recent Lean proof of the Prime Number Theorem in strong form\, completing a challenge set in January 2024 by Alex Kontorovich and Terry Tao. We hope Gauss will help assist working mathematicians\, especially those who do not write formal code themselves.\n\n\n5:00–6:00 pm\nSpecial Lecture: Yann LeCun\, Science Center Hall C\n\n\n\n  \nWednesday\, Sep. 17\, 2025 \n\n\n\n8:30–9:00 am\nRefreshments\n\n\n9:00–10:00 am\nMichael Mulligan\, UCR and Logical Intelligence \nTitle: Spontaneous Kolmogorov-Arnold Geometry in Vanilla Fully-Connected Neural Networks \nAbstract: The Kolmogorov-Arnold (KA) representation theorem constructs universal\, but highly non-smooth inner functions (the first layer map) in a single (non-linear) hidden layer neural network. Such universal functions have a distinctive local geometry\, a “texture\,” which can be characterized by the inner function’s Jacobian\, $J(\mathbf{x})$\, as $\mathbf{x}$ varies over the data. It is natural to ask if this distinctive KA geometry emerges through conventional neural network optimization. We find that indeed KA geometry often does emerge through the process of training vanilla single hidden layer fully-connected neural networks (MLPs). We quantify KA geometry through the statistical properties of the exterior powers of $J(\mathbf{x})$: number of zero rows and various observables for the minor statistics of $J(\mathbf{x})$\, which measure the scale and axis alignment of $J(\mathbf{x})$. This leads to a rough phase diagram in the space of function complexity and model hyperparameters where KA geometry occurs. The motivation is first to understand how neural networks organically learn to prepare input data for later downstream processing and\, second\, to learn enough about the emergence of KA geometry to accelerate learning through a timely intervention in network hyperparameters. This research is the “flip side” of KA-Networks (KANs). We do not engineer KA into the neural network\, but rather watch KA emerge in shallow MLPs.\n\n\n10:00–10:30 am\nBreak\n\n\n10:30–11:30 am\nEve Bodnia\, Logical Intelligence \nTitle: \nAbstract: We introduce a method of topological analysis on spiking correlation networks in neurological systems. This method explores the neural manifold as in the manifold hypothesis\, which posits that information is often represented by a lower-dimensional manifold embedded in a higher-dimensional space. After collecting neuron activity from human and mouse organoids using a micro-electrode array\, we extract connectivity using pairwise spike-timing time correlations\, which are optimized for time delays introduced by synaptic delays. We then look at network topology to identify emergent structures and compare the results to two randomized models – constrained randomization and bootstrapping across datasets. In histograms of the persistence of topological features\, we see that the features from the original dataset consistently exceed the variability of the null distributions\, suggesting that the observed topological features reflect significant correlation patterns in the data rather than random fluctuations. In a study of network resiliency\, we found that random removal of 10 % of nodes still yielded a network with a lesser but still significant number of topological features in the homology group H1 (counts 2-dimensional voids in the dataset) above the variability of our constrained randomization model; however\, targeted removal of nodes in H1 features resulted in rapid topological collapse\, indicating that the H1 cycles in these brain organoid networks are fragile and highly sensitive to perturbations. By applying topological analysis to neural data\, we offer a new complementary framework to standard methods for understanding information processing across a variety of complex neural systems.\n\n\n11:30 am–12:00 pm\nBreak\n\n\n12:00–1:00 pm\nAlex Kontorovich\, Rutgers University \nTitle: The Shape of Math to Come \nAbstract: We will discuss some ongoing experiments that may have meaningful impact on what working in research mathematics might look like in a decade (if not sooner).\n\n\n5:00–6:00 pm\nMike Freedman Millennium Lecture: The Poincaré Conjecture and Mathematical Discovery (Science Center Hall D)\n\n\n\n  \nThursday\, Sep. 18\, 2025 \n\n\n\n8:30–9:00 am\nMorning refreshments\n\n\n9:00–10:00 am\nElliott Glazer\, Epoch AI \nTitle: FrontierMath to Infinity \nAbstract: I will discuss FrontierMath\, a mathematical problem solving benchmark I developed over the past year\, including its design philosophy and what we’ve learned about AI’s trajectory from it. I will then look much further out\, speculate about what a “perfectly efficient” mathematical intelligence should be capable of\, and discuss how high-ceiling math capability metrics can illuminate the path towards that ideal.\n\n\n10:00–10:30 am\nBreak\n\n\n10:30–11:30 am\nBrice Ménard\, Johns Hopkins \nTitle:Demystifying the over-parametrization of neural networks \nAbstract: I will show how to estimate the dimensionality of neural encodings (learned weight structures) to assess how many parameters are effectively used by a neural network. I will then show how their scaling properties provide us with fundamental exponents on the learning process of a given task. I will comment on connections to thermodynamics.\n\n\n11:30 am–12:00 pm\nBreak\n\n\n12:00–12:30 pm\nPatrick Shafto\, Rutgers \nTitle: Math for AI and AI for Math \nAbstract: I will briefly discuss two DARPA programs aiming to deepen connections between mathematics and AI\, specifically through geometric and symbolic perspectives. The first aims for mathematical foundations for understanding the behavior and performance of modern AI systems such as Large Language Models and Diffusion models. The second aims to develop AI for pure mathematics through an understanding of abstraction\, decomposition\, and formalization. I will close with some thoughts on the coming convergence between AI and math.\n\n\n12:30–12:45 pm\nBreak\n\n\n12:45–2:00 pm\nMike Freedman\, Harvard CMSA \nTitle: How to think about the shape of mathematics \nFollowed by group discussion \n \n\n\n\n  \n  \n  \nSupport provided by Logical Intelligence. \n \n  \n 
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/mlgeometry/
LOCATION:CMSA 20 Garden Street Cambridge\, Massachusetts 02138 United States
CATEGORIES:Conference,Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/GML_2025.7-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250916T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250916T180000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20250807T142820Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250922T134159Z
UID:10003760-1758042000-1758045600@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Geometry of Machine Learning Special Lecture: Yann LeCun
DESCRIPTION:Geometry of Machine Learning Special Lecture: Yann LeCun \nTitle: Self-Supervised Learning\, JEPA\, World Models\, and the future of AI \nDate: Tuesday\, Sep. 16\, 2025 \nTime: 5:00 pm ET \nLocation: Harvard Science Center\, Hall C & via Zoom Webinar
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/lecun91625/
LOCATION:Harvard Science Center\, 1 Oxford Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138
CATEGORIES:Special Lectures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/YannLeCun_GML-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250917T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250917T180000
DTSTAMP:20260506T153352
CREATED:20250311T134916Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251010T115024Z
UID:10003656-1758128400-1758132000@cmsa.fas.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Millennium Prize Problems Lecture - Michael Freedman: The Poincaré Conjecture and Mathematical Discovery  
DESCRIPTION:Millennium Prize Problems Lecture\nDate: September 17\, 2025 \nLocation: Harvard Science Center Hall D & via Zoom Webinar \nTime: 5:00–6:00 pm \nSpeaker: Michael Freedman\, Harvard CMSA and Logical Intelligence  \nTitle: The Poincaré Conjecture and Mathematical Discovery   \nAbstract: The AI age requires us to re-examine what mathematics is about. The Seven Millenium Problems provide an ideal lens for doing so. Five of the seven are core mathematical questions\, two are meta-mathematical – asking about the scope of mathematics. The Poincare conjecture represents one of the core subjects\, manifold topology. I’ll explain what it is about\, its broader context\, and why people cared so much about finding a solution\, which ultimately arrived through the work of R. Hamilton and G. Perelman. Although stated in manifold topology\, the proof requires vast developments in the theory of parabolic partial differential equations\, some of which I will sketch. Like most powerful techniques\, the methods survive their original objectives and are now deployed widely in both three- and four-dimensional manifold topology.  \n  \nRead more about the Poincaré Conjecture at the Clay Math website. \nOrganizers: Martin Bridson\, Clay Mathematics Institute | Dan Freed\, Harvard University and CMSA | Mike Hopkins\, Harvard University \n\n                   \n\nMillennium Prize Problems Lecture Series
URL:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/event/clay_91725/
LOCATION:Harvard Science Center Hall D\, 1 Oxford Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138\, United States
CATEGORIES:Millennium Prize Problems Lecture,Special Lectures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cmsa.fas.harvard.edu/media/Freedman_web_ad.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR