Date
Thu, 20 Jan 2022
Time
12:00 - 13:00
Location
L1
Speaker
Gillian Grindstaff & Jane Coons
Organisation
University of Oxford

Symmetrically Colored Gaussian Graphical Models with Toric Vanishing Ideals

Jane Coons

Gaussian graphical models are multivariate Gaussian statistical models in which a graph encodes conditional independence relations among the random variables. Adding colors to this graph allows us to describe situations where some entries in the concentration matrices in the model are assumed to be equal. In this talk, we focus on RCOP models, in which this coloring is obtained from the orbits of a subgroup of the automorphism group of the underlying graph. We show that when the underlying block graph is a one-clique-sum of complete graphs, the Zariski closure of the set of concentration matrices of an RCOP model on this graph is a toric variety. We also give a Markov basis for the vanishing ideal of this variety in these cases.

 

Topological persistence for multi-scale terrain profiling and feature detection in drylands hydrology

Gillian Grindstaff

With the growing availability of remote sensing products and computational resources, an increasing amount of landscape data is available, and with it, increasing demand for automated feature detection and useful morphological summaries. Topological data analysis, and in particular, persistent homology, has been applied successfully to detect landslides and characterize soil pores, but its application to hydrology is currently still limited. We demonstrate how persistent homology of a real-valued function on a two-dimensional domain can be used to summarize critical points and shape in a landscape simultaneously across all scales, and how that data can be used to automatically detect features of hydrological interest, such as: experimental conditions in a rainfall simulator, boundary conditions of landscape evolution models, and earthen berms and stock ponds, placed historically to alter natural runoff patterns in the American southwest.

Further Information

Jane Coons is a Supernumerary Teaching Fellow in Mathematics at St John's College. She is a member of OCIAM, and Algebraic Systems Biology research groups. Her research interests are in algebra, geometry and combinatorics, and their applications to statistics and biology.

 

Giliian Grindstaff is a post-doc working in the area of geometric and topological data analysis at the MI.

Please contact us with feedback and comments about this page. Last updated on 03 Apr 2022 01:32.