Department Seminar by Pieter Allaart
Probability Seminar Series Pieter Allaart, Professor Link to join seminar: Hosted on Webex. |
On univoque and strongly univoque sets
Probability Seminar Series Pieter Allaart, Professor Link to join seminar: Hosted on Webex. |
On univoque and strongly univoque sets
Student Seminar Series Lu Cheng, PhD Candidate in Statistics Link to join seminar: Hosted on Microsoft Teams. |
First-Order Correction of Statistical Significance for Screening Two-Way Epistatic Interactions
Statistics and Biostatistics Seminar Series Arman Sabbaghi, Professor Link to join seminar: Hosted on Webex. |
Predictive Comparisons for Screening and Interpreting Inputs in Machine Learning
Actuarial Science and Financial Mathematics Seminar Series Nan Zhu, Professor Link to join seminar: Hosted on Webex. |
The efficiency of voluntary risk classification in insurance markets
Probability Seminar Series Louis-Pierre Arguin, Professor Link to join seminar: Hosted on Webex. |
Large Values of the Riemann Zeta Function in Short Intervals
Actuarial Science and Financial Mathematics Seminar Series Alfred Muller, Professor Link to join seminar: Hosted on Webex. |
Dependence uncertainty bounds for the energy score and the multivariate Gini mean difference
Probability Seminar Series Cristopher Moore, Professor Link to join seminar: Hosted on Webex. |
The Planted Matching Problem
Student Seminar Series José Luis Avilez Escribens, MMath Student in Statistics Link to join seminar: Hosted on Teams. |
Is the integral the most important object in all of mathematics?
Actuarial Science and Financial Mathematics Seminar Series Johanna Ziegel, Professor Link to join seminar: Hosted on Webex. |
Distributional (Single) Index Models
This event is hosted by the Canadian Statistical Sciences Institute (CANSSI). For full details, please visit their events page.
Speaker
Dr. Kristian Lum
Assistant Research Professor
Department of Computer and Information Science
School of Engineering and Applied Science
University of Pennsylvania
Talk Title: Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency: (Counter)-Examples from Predictive Models in Criminal Justice