Consensus-based optimization methods converge globally
Fornasier, M
Klock, T
Riedl, K
SIAM Journal on Optimization
volume 34
issue 3
2973-3004
(03 Sep 2024)
Convergence of Anisotropic Consensus-Based Optimization in Mean-Field Law
Fornasier, M
Klock, T
Riedl, K
Applications of Evolutionary Computation
volume 13224
738-754
(15 Apr 2022)
Consensus-based optimisation with truncated noise
Fornasier, M
Richtárik, P
Riedl, K
Sun, L
European Journal of Applied Mathematics
1-24
(05 Apr 2024)
CBX: Python and Julia Packages for Consensus-Based
Interacting Particle Methods
Bailo, R
Barbaro, A
Gomes, S
Riedl, K
Roith, T
Totzeck, C
Vaes, U
Journal of Open Source Software
volume 9
issue 98
6611-6611
(21 Jun 2024)
Interacting Particle Methods
Insights and caveats from mining local and global temporal motifs in cryptocurrency transaction networks
Arnold, N
Zhong, P
Ba, C
Steer, B
Mondragon, R
Cuadrado, F
Lambiotte, R
Clegg, R
Scientific Reports
volume 14
issue 1
(04 Nov 2024)
Collective effect of self-learning and social learning on language dynamics: a naming game approach in social networks
Wen, T
Chen, Y
Lambiotte, R
Journal of the Royal Society Interface
volume 21
issue 221
(04 Dec 2024)
Investigation of logarithmic signatures for feature extraction and application to marine engine fault diagnosis
Patil, C
Theotokatos, G
Wu, Y
Lyons, T
Engineering Applications of Artificial Intelligence
volume 138
issue Part A
(25 Sep 2024)
This workshop will be held at Oxford on 9th-11th December 2024. The focus will be on Rough Path Analysis and its rapidly growing applications in Applied Stochastic Analysis, ranging from the resolution of ill-posed stochastic partial differential equations to new ways of handling high dimensional data.
A topological approach to mapping space signatures
Giusti, C
Lee, D
Nanda, V
Oberhauser, H
Advances in Applied Mathematics
volume 163
issue A
(27 Sep 2024)
Tue, 03 Dec 2024
14:00
14:00
L6
Hyperbolic intersection arrangements
Samuel Lewis
((University of Oxford))
Abstract
Consider a connected graph and choose a subset of its vertices. From this simple setup, Iyama and Wemyss define a collection of real hyperplanes known as an intersection arrangement, going on to classify all tilings of the affine plane that arise in this way. These "local" generalisations of Coxeter combinatorics also admit a nice wall-crossing structure via Dynkin involutions and longest Weyl elements. In this talk I give an analogous classification in the hyperbolic setting using the data of an "overextended" ADE diagram with three distinguished vertices. I then discuss ongoing work applying intersection arrangements to parametrise notions of stability conditions for preprojective algebras.