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강연자 이창한
소속 Northwestern University
date 2021-09-16

 

Abstract: 
While the typical behaviors of stochastic systems are often deceptively oblivious to the tail distributions of the underlying uncertainties, the ways rare events arise are vastly different depending on whether the underlying tail distributions are light-tailed or heavy-tailed. Roughly speaking, in light-tailed settings, a system-wide rare event arises because everything goes wrong a little bit as if the entire system has conspired up to provoke the rare event (conspiracy principle), whereas, in heavy-tailed settings, a system-wide rare event arises because a small number of components fail catastrophically (catastrophe principle). In the first part of this talk, I will introduce the recent developments in the theory of large deviations for heavy-tailed stochastic processes at the sample path level and rigorously characterize the catastrophe principle. In the second part, I will explore an intriguing connection between the catastrophe principle and a central mystery of modern AI—the unreasonably good generalization performance of deep neural networks.
 
This talk is based on the ongoing research in collaboration with Mihail Bazhba, Jose Blanchet, Bohan Chen, Sewoong Oh, Insuk Seo, Zhe Su, Xingyu Wang, and Bert Zwart.
 
Short Bio: 
Chang-Han Rhee is an Assistant Professor in Industrial Engineering and Management Sciences at Northwestern University. Before joining Northwestern University, he was a postdoctoral researcher in the Stochastics Group at Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica and in Industrial & Systems Engineering and Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Tech. He received his Ph.D. in Computational and Mathematical Engineering from Stanford University. His research interests include applied probability, stochastic simulation, and statistical learning. He was a winner of the Outstanding Publication Award from the INFORMS Simulation Society in 2016, a winner of the Best Student Paper Award (MS/OR focused) at the 2012 Winter Simulation Conference, and a finalist of the 2013 INFORMS George Nicholson Student Paper Competition.
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첨부 '1'
List of Articles
카테고리 제목 소속 강연자
특별강연 Contact topology and the three-body problem file 서울대학교 Otto van Koert
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수학강연회 Q-curvature in conformal geometry file 서강대 Pak Tung Ho
수학강연회 Symmetry Breaking in Quasi-1D Coulomb Systems file 서강대학교 Paul Jung
수학강연회 It all started with Moser file Univ. of Wisconsin/포항공대 Paul Rabinowitz
특별강연 Mathematical Analysis Models and Siumlations file Collège de France Pierre-Louis Lions
BK21 FOUR Rookies Pitch 2022-1 Rookies Pitch: Probability, PDE (Ramil Mouad) file 수학연구소 Ramil Mouad
수학강연회 Noncommutative Geometry. Quantum Space-Time and Diffeomorphism Invariant Geometry file 서울대학교 Raphael Ponge
수학강연회 Fefferman's program and Green functions in conformal geometry file 서울대학교 Raphaël Ponge
수학강연회 Weak and strong well-posedness of critical and supercritical SDEs with singular coefficients file University of Illinois Renming Song
수학강연회 Green’s function for initial-boundary value problem file National Univ. of Singapore Shih-Hsien Yu
수학강연회 On Ingram’s Conjecture file University of Zagrab Sonja Stimac
수학강연회 <학부생을 위한 ε 강연> What mathematics can do for the real and even fake world file UCLA Stanley Osher
BK21 FOUR Rookies Pitch 2022-1 Rookies Pitch: Integrable Systems (Sylvain Carpentier) file QSMS Sylvain Carpentier
수학강연회 Space.Time.Noise file Meijo University Takeyuki Hida
특별강연 Harmonic bundles and Toda lattices with opposite sign file RIMS, Kyoto Univ. Takuro Mochizuki
수학강연회 Nonlocal generators of jump type Markov processes file University of Bielefeld Walter Hoh
BK21 FOUR Rookies Pitch 2022-1 Rookies Pitch: Functional Analysis (Wang Xumin) file 수학연구소 Wang Xumin
수학강연회 The phase retrieval problem file Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Yang Wang
특별강연 Regularization by noise in nonlinear evolution equations file Dep. Math., Kyoto Univ. Yoshio Tsutsumi
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