Tue, 23 Jan 2024

16:00 - 17:00
L6

Combinatorial moment sequences

Natasha Blitvic
(Queen Mary University of London)
Abstract

We will look at a number of interesting examples — some proven, others merely conjectured — of Hamburger moment sequences in combinatorics. We will consider ways in which this positivity may be expected: for instance, in different types of combinatorial statistics on perfect matchings that encode moments of noncommutative analogues of the classical Central Limit Theorem. We will also consider situations in which this positivity may be surprising, and where proving it would open up new approaches to a class of very hard open problems in combinatorics.

An automated method for tendon image segmentation on ultrasound using grey-level co-occurrence matrix features and hidden Gaussian Markov random fields
Scott, I Connell, D Moulton, D Waters, S Namburete, A Arnab, A Malliaras, P Computers in Biology and Medicine volume 169 (20 Dec 2023)
Thu, 15 Feb 2024
14:00

Algorithmic Insurance

Agni Orfanoudaki
(Oxford University Saïd Business School)
Abstract

As machine learning algorithms get integrated into the decision-making process of companies and organizations, insurance products are being developed to protect their providers from liability risk. Algorithmic liability differs from human liability since it is based on data-driven models compared to multiple heterogeneous decision-makers and its performance is known a priori for a given set of data. Traditional actuarial tools for human liability do not consider these properties, primarily focusing on the distribution of historical claims. We propose, for the first time, a quantitative framework to estimate the risk exposure of insurance contracts for machine-driven liability, introducing the concept of algorithmic insurance. Our work provides ML model developers and insurance providers with a comprehensive risk evaluation approach for this new class of products. Thus, we set the foundations of a niche area of research at the intersection of the literature in operations, risk management, and actuarial science. Specifically, we present an optimization formulation to estimate the risk exposure of a binary classification model given a pre-defined range of premiums. Our approach outlines how properties of the model, such as discrimination performance, interpretability, and generalizability, can influence the insurance contract evaluation. To showcase a practical implementation of the proposed framework, we present a case study of medical malpractice in the context of breast cancer detection. Our analysis focuses on measuring the effect of the model parameters on the expected financial loss and identifying the aspects of algorithmic performance that predominantly affect the risk of the contract.

Paper Reference: Bertsimas, D. and Orfanoudaki, A., 2021. Pricing algorithmic insurance. arXiv preprint arXiv:2106.00839.

Paper link: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2106.00839.pdf

Smooth numbers and the Dickman ρ function
Gorodetsky, O Journal d'Analyse Mathematique volume 151 issue 1 139-169 (22 Dec 2023)
Regularized integrals and manifolds with log corners
Dupont, C Panzer, E Pym, B (29 Dec 2023)
Mon, 04 Mar 2024
14:15
L4

Significance of rank zero Donaldson-Thomas (DT) invariants in curve counting theories

Sohelya Feyzbakhsh
(Imperial College London)
Abstract
Fix a Calabi-Yau 3-fold X of Picard rank one satisfying the Bogomolov-Gieseker conjecture of Bayer-Macrì-Toda, such as the quintic 3-fold. I will first describe two methods to achieve explicit formulae relating rank zero Donaldson-Thomas (DT) invariants to Pandharipande-Thomas (PT) invariants using wall-crossing with respect to weak Bridgeland stability conditions on X. As applications, I will find sharp Castelnuovo-type bounds for PT invariants and explain how combining these explicit formulas with S-duality in physics enlarges the known table of Gopakumar-Vafa (GV) invariants. The second part is joint work with string theorists Sergei Alexandrov, Albrecht Klemm, Boris Pioline, and Thorsten Schimannek.
Mon, 04 Mar 2024
15:30
L4

Rigidity of ideal symmetric sets

Stephan Stadler
(Max Planck Institute for Mathematics)
Abstract

A subset in the ideal boundary of a CAT(0) space is called symmetric if every complete geodesic with one ideal boundary point
in the set has both ideal boundary points in the set. In the late 80s Eberlein proved that if a Hadamard manifold contains a non-trivial closed symmetric  subset in its ideal boundary, then its holonomy group cannot act transitively. This leads to rigidty via
the Berger-Simons Theorem. I will discuss rigidity of ideal symmetric sets in the general context of locally compact geodesically complete
CAT(0) spaces.
 

Subscribe to