Calendar

Apr
7
Thu
Mushfeq Khan: The cupping property @ Keller Hall 314
Apr 7 @ 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm
Apr
14
Thu
Mushfeq Khan: The Cupping Property (cont’d) @ Keller Hall 314
Apr 14 @ 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm
Sep
1
Thu
Logic seminar: Achilles Beros
Sep 1 @ 1:30 pm – Sep 1 @ 2:20 pm

Achilles Beros will
speak on “Algorithmic learning and the arithmetic hierarchy”

Summary:

I will present a theorem from my thesis that establishes the arithmetic
complexity of a well-known learning criterion. Two other papers have
been published since then that continue the line of research. I will
discuss the newer papers as well as broader connections between
recursion theory and learning theory.

Keller Hall 303

Sep
8
Thu
Logic seminar: Mushfeq Khan @ Keller Hall 303
Sep 8 @ 1:30 pm – Sep 8 @ 2:30 pm

This week the Sporadic Logic Seminar will be Mushfeq Khan speaking on
“Turing degrees and Muchnik degrees of recursively
bounded DNR functions”.

Summary:

This talk is based on a forthcoming paper by Steve Simpson. It contains
some results that shed light on a part of the Muchnik lattice that remains
poorly understood: the various degrees of recursively bounded DNR functions
obtained by varying the recursive bound.

Keller 303

Sep
15
Thu
Logic seminar: Manabu Hagiwara @ Keller 303
Sep 15 @ 1:30 pm – Sep 15 @ 2:30 pm

I will give a tutorial talk, how to use LEAN and Coq/MathCopm.SSReflect, which are famous proof assistant systems.

Keller 303

Sep
22
Thu
Logic seminar: Mushfeq Khan
Sep 22 @ 1:30 pm – Sep 22 @ 2:30 pm

This week Mushfeq Khan is continuing his
seminar from 2 weeks ago on
“Turing degrees and Muchnik degrees of recursively bounded DNR functions”.

Summary:

This talk is based on a forthcoming paper by Steve Simpson. It contains
some results that shed light on a part of the Muchnik lattice that remains
poorly understood: the various degrees of recursively bounded DNR functions
obtained by varying the recursive bound.

Keller Hall 303

Sep
29
Thu
Logic Seminar: William DeMeo @ Keller 303
Sep 29 @ 1:30 pm – Sep 29 @ 2:20 pm

TITLE: The Algebraic Approach to Determining the Complexity of Constraint Satisfaction Problems

SPEAKER: William DeMeo

ABSTRACT: The “CSP-dichotomy conjecture” of Feder and Vardi asserts that every constraint satisfaction problem (CSP) is in P or is NP-complete. Sometime around the late 1990′s it was observed that a CSP is naturally associated with a general (universal) algebra via a certain Galois connection, and that this connection makes it possible to use algebraic methods to determine the complexity class of a CSP. This led to the “algebraic CSP-dichotomy conjecture” which, after more than a decade of substantial research, has been reduced to the following conjecture: the CSP associated with a finite idempotent algebra A is tractable if and only if the variety generated by A has a Taylor term.

In this talk we try to give most of the background required to understand the algebraic approach to CSP. We give some concrete examples that demonstrate how one uses properties of a universal algebra to determine the complexity class of a CSP. If time permits, we will highlight some of our most recent discoveries that have helped resolve the dichotomy conjecture for most idempotent varieties.

The talk should be fairly self-contained for anyone greater than or equal to a math or cs graduate student. Roughly speaking, if you have heard of the complexity classes P and NP and if you know what a universal algebra is, then you should understand most of this talk.

Oct
6
Thu
Logic Seminar: David Ross @ Keller Hall 303
Oct 6 @ 1:30 pm – Oct 6 @ 2:30 pm

TITLE: Asymptotic Fixed Points, Part I.

ABSTRACT: By a standard exercise, a uniform contraction on a complete metric
space has a fixed point. Easy examples show that this fails if the
contraction is not uniform. I will discuss some recent results where the
uniform property is replaced by asymptotic conditions on the contraction.
These results are most easily framed and proved using methods from
nonstandard analysis, so I will also briefly brief review those methods. If
there is interest, I will actually prove some of the fixed-point results in
a second seminar (hence the “Part I.”)