Seminar series
Date
Fri, 08 Mar 2024
16:00
Location
L1
Speaker
James Taylor (Mathematical Institute) and Anthony Webster (Department of Statistics)

Speaker: James Taylor
Title: D-Modules and p-adic Representations

Abstract: The representation theory of finite groups is a beautiful and well-understood subject. However, when one considers more complicated groups things become more interesting, and to classify their representations is often a much harder problem. In this talk, I will introduce the classical theory, the particular groups I am interested in, and explain how one might hope to understand their representations through the use of D-modules - the algebraic incarnation of differential equations.

 

Speaker: Anthony Webster
Title: An Introduction to Epidemiology and Causal Inference

Abstract: This talk will introduce epidemiology and causal inference from the perspective of a statistician and former theoretical physicist. Despite their studies being underpinned by deep and often complex mathematics, epidemiologists are generally more concerned by seemingly mundane information about the relationships between potential risk factors and disease. Because of this, I will argue that a good epidemiologist with minimal statistical knowledge, will often do better than a highly trained statistician. I will also argue that causal assumptions are a necessary part of epidemiology, should be made more explicitly, and allow a much wider range of causal inferences to be explored. In the process, I will introduce ideas from epidemiology and causal inference such as Mendelian Randomisation and the "do calculus", methodological approaches that will increasingly underpin data-driven population research.  

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