Thu, 06 Feb 2025

14:00 - 15:00
Lecture Room 3

Deflation Techniques for Finding Multiple Local Minima of a Nonlinear Least Squares Problem

Marcus Webb
(University of Manchester)
Abstract

Deflation is a technique to remove a solution to a problem so that other solutions to this problem can subsequently be found. The most prominent instance is deflation we see in eigenvalue solvers, but recent interest has been in deflation of rootfinding problems from nonlinear PDEs with many isolated solutions (spearheaded by Farrell and collaborators). 

 

In this talk I’ll show you recent results on deflation techniques for optimisation algorithms with many local minima, focusing on the Gauss—Newton algorithm for nonlinear least squares problems.  I will demonstrate advantages of these techniques instead of the more obvious approach of applying deflated Newton’s method to the first order optimality conditions and present some proofs that these algorithms will avoid the deflated solutions. Along the way we will see an interesting generalisation of Woodbury’s formula to least squares problems, something that should be more well known in Numerical Linear Algebra (joint work with Güttel, Nakatsukasa and Bloor Riley).

 

Main preprint: https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.14438

WoodburyLS preprint: https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.15120

Wed, 06 Nov 2024
16:00
L6

Presentations of Bordism Categories

Filippos Sytilidis
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

A topological quantum field theory (TQFT) is a functor from a category of bordisms to a category of vector spaces. Classifying low-dimensional TQFTs often involves considering presentations of bordism categories in terms of generators and relations. In this talk, we will introduce these concepts and outline a program for obtaining such presentations using Morse–Cerf theory.

Kazhdan constants for Chevalley groups over the integers
Kaluba, M Kielak, D Revista Matemática Iberoamericana (14 Nov 2024)

Hello all, we are the Mirzakhani Society, a group for all the women and non-binary mathematicians at Oxford. We run lots and lots of relaxed events from pizza nights to career conferences. Our main aim is to create a warm and welcoming environment for women* to come together and chat about life, maths and anything in-between. 

 

TE-PAI: exact time evolution by sampling random circuits
Kiumi, C Koczor, B (22 Oct 2024)
Rigidity of the Torelli subgroup in $\mathrm{Out}(F_{N})$
Hensel, S Horbez, C Wade, R Revista Matemática Iberoamericana (25 Oct 2024)

Did you know that nearly 40 early career researchers in the department actively play a musical instrument? If you haven't told us yet about your extra-mathematical talents, especially faculty, please let Dyrol know which instrument you play. We may (may) do a feature next term on maths and music. You know, get a band together, that sort of thing.

Image?

A French horn, one of the instruments we play.

Titchmarsh Research Fellow in Mathematical Physics

Postdoctoral Research Associate in Derived Algebraic Geometry and Homotopy Theory

Postdoctoral Research Associate in Operator Algebras

Associate Professorship (or Professorship) of Pure Mathematics (with a preference for areas relating to Geometry)

Full list here

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