Tidligere arrangementer - Side 91
ESOP seminar. Andreas Müller is an Associate professor at the University of Oslo. He will present a paper entitled "A theory of structural change that can fit the data", co-authored by Simon Alder and Timo Boppart.
We will have a “mingle” meeting. There will be updates from Kristine and Per on the running of the institute. But fear not, there will also be plenty of time for informal chat and eating of cake. All are welcome to the lobby on the first floor.
Perfeksjon fra b?nne til kopp
Hvordan jobber Tim Wendelboe i sin jakt p? den perfekte kopp med kaffe?
Tim er b?de kaffebonde, kaffebrenner og barista og vil gi deg et lite innblikk i alt arbeidet som ligger bak hver kopp kaffe som serveres i hans kaffebar p? Grünerl?kka.
Nicola Lunardon (Department of Economics, Management and Statistics, University of Milano-Bicocca) will give a seminar in the lunch area, 8th floor Niels Henrik Abels hus at 14:15.
Paul Krühner (TU Wien) gives a lecture with the title: On the Brownian limit order book dynamics
ESOP seminar. Volker Nocke is a Professor of Economics at the University of Mannheim. He will present a paper entitled "Multiproduct-Firm Oligopoly: An Aggregative Games Approach", co-authored by Nicolas Schutz.
Professor Steve Bova is a Professor and Group Leader at the Prostate Cancer Research Center, Institute of Biosciences and Medical Technology, BioMediTech, University of Tampere and Fimlab Laboratories, Tampere University Hospital in Finland.
He will give a talk titled, 'Leveraging the evolutionary history of metastatic prostate cancer'.
Jaime Castro-Mondragòn is a PhD student in Bioinformatics. The title of his talk is, 'Identification of Transcription Factors related to mammalian promoters with distal functions'.
Teklu Bekele, Associate Professor, Pedagogy Department, UiO
By Alan C. Love from University of Minnesota
Ny app blir presentert og du f?r faglig p?fyll om utfordringer i helsetjenesten. H?r om erfaringene med brukertester utf?rt i Oslo, B?rum, Drammen og Tvedestrand kommune! I workshop-delen ?nsker vi innspill og erfaringer fra deg som jobber i tjenesten, men ogs? fra akt?rer som utvikler l?sninger som kan forebygge feil- og underern?ring.
Guest lecture by PD Dr. habil. Regina Scherlie?, Department of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics, Christian-Albrechts-Universit?t (CAU) Kiel, Germany.
Guest lecture by PD Dr. habil. Regina Scherlie?, Department of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics, Christian-Albrechts-Universit?t (CAU) Kiel, Germany.
Florentina Paraschiv (Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet) gives a lecture with the title: Estimation and Application of Fully Parametric Multifactor Quantile Regression with Dynamic Coefficients
Guest lecture by Post doc Stine Kleppe Krogsrud, with the title "How do brain and cognition change during development? - A neuroscience perspective on brain development".
ESOP seminar. Anna Tompsett is an Assistant Professor at Stockholm University. She will present a paper entitled "Community Participation in Decision-Making Evidence from an experiment in safe drinking water provision in Bangladesh", co-authored by Malgosia Madajewicz, and Ahasan Habib.
Edvard Mortsell, Stockholm University, Department of Physics
Dr. Harald Binder, Professor, Institute of Medical Biostatistics, Epidemiology and Informatics, University Medical Center, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany, will present the lecture:
"Two uses of stagewise regression: from landmarking in cancer patients to deep learning for SNPs".
In the 80's B?kstedt introduced THH(A), the Topological Hochschild homology of a ring A, and a trace map from algebraic K-theory of A to THH(A). This trace map, along with the circle action on THH, have since been used extensively to make calculations of algebraic K-theory. When the ring A has an anti-involution Hesselholt and Madsen have promoted the spectrum K(A) to a genuine Z/2-spectrum whose fixed points is the K-theory of Hermitian forms over A. They also introduced Real topological Hochschild homology THR(A), which is a genuine equivariant refinement of THH, and Dotto constructed an equivariant refinement of B?kstedt's trace map. I will report on recent joint work with Dotto, Patchkoria and Reeh on models for the spectrum THR(A) and calculations of its RO(Z/2)-graded homotopy groups.
Adam S?rensen (Oslo) will give a talk with title: Overlapping qubits
Abstract: I will discuss the paper "Overlapping Qubits" by Chao, Reichardt, Sutherland, and Vidick (arXiv:1701.01062 - category: Quantum Physics!). Qubits are the bits of quantum computing. In the paper the authors take the point of view that a qubit mathematically is described by a pair of anticommuting reflections on a finite dimensional Hilbert space. Two qubits are independent if their defining operators commute. The central point of the paper is that when performing observations we should not expect two qubits to be exactly independent, rather we should expect them to be almost independent, i.e. the norms of the commutators should be small. This naturally leads to questions about almost commuting matrices, which is why I care. I will attempt to explain how questions of almost commuting matrices come up, and how the physicists answer them.
ESOP seminar. Jaroslav Borovi?ka is an Assistant Professor of Economics at New York University. He will present a paper entitled "Identifying ambiguity shocks in business cycle models using survey data", co-authored by Anmol Bhandri and Paul Ho.
Lise Christensen, Associate Professor DARK cosmology Centre, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen
Large Eddy Simulation of the interaction of water waves with turbulent air flow