Department seminar by Alex Wein
Please Note: This seminar will be given online.
Department seminar Alex Wein Link to join seminar: Hosted on Zoom |
Understanding Statistical-vs-Computational Tradeoffs via Low-Degree Polynomials
Please Note: This seminar will be given online.
Department seminar Alex Wein Link to join seminar: Hosted on Zoom |
Understanding Statistical-vs-Computational Tradeoffs via Low-Degree Polynomials
Please Note: This seminar will be given online.
Department seminar Martin Bladt Link to join seminar: Hosted on Zoom |
Matrix regression: models, algorithms, and applications
Please Note: This seminar will be given online.
Department seminar Joe Zhong Link to join seminar: Hosted on Zoom |
Interpolation Phase Transition in Neural Networks: Memorization and Generalization under Neural Tangent Model
Please Note: This seminar will be given online.
Department seminar Nan Wu Link to join seminar: Hosted on Zoom |
Graph Laplacian based Gaussian processes on restricted domains
Please Note: This seminar will be given online.
Department seminar Jeffrey Negrea Link to join seminar: Hosted on Zoom |
Adapting to failure of the IID assumption
Please Note: This seminar will be given online.
Department seminar Aukosh Jagannath Link to join seminar: Hosted on Zoom |
Online SGD on non-convex losses from high-dimensional inference
Please Note: This seminar will be given online.
Department seminar Simon Trimborn Link to join seminar: Hosted on Zoom |
Efficiency, risk and fraud - The Bitcoin price discovery network under the microscope
Please Note: This seminar will be given online.
Department seminar Yongyi Guo |
A statistical approach to feature-based dynamic pricing
Please Note: This seminar will be given online.
Department seminar Mikko Pakkanen Link to join seminar: Hosted on Zoom |
Rough volatility – Re-examining empirical evidence through the lens of generalised method of moments
Please Note: This seminar will be given online.
Department seminar Bikram Karmaker Link to join seminar: Hosted on Zoom |
Understanding Early Adoption of Hybrid Cars via a New Multinomial Probit Model with Multiple Network Weights