Colloquium
- Event Description:Cheryl Harrison, National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), 51´«Ã½ COCoherent structures in the ocean: identification and applications Following the visualization of the ocean surface
- Event Description:Brad Reisfeld, Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Colorado State University The use of mathematical modeling to characterize the disposition and effects of xenobiotics in humans Most people are exposed to
- Event Description:Zachary Kilpatrick, Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Colorado 51´«Ã½ Evidence accumulation in dynamic environments Models of evidence accumulation are of interest in disciplines ranging from
- Event Description:Yu-Jui Huang, Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Colorado 51´«Ã½ Healthcare and Consumption with Aging Healthcare slows the natural growth of mortality, indirectly increasing utility from consumption through
- Event Description:Matt McQueen, Department of Integrated Physiology, University of Colorado 51´«Ã½ What is Big Data and Why Should I Care? Lessons from Human Genomics Over the past decade, the rapid advance of technology has resulted in an
- Event Description:Francois Meyer; Department of Electrical, Computer, and Energy Engineering; University of Colorado 51´«Ã½ A Graph Distance for the Structural Analysis of Dynamic Networks To quantify the evolution of time-varying networks,
- Event Description:Tor D. Wager, Department of Psychology & Neuroscience, University of Colorado at 51´«Ã½Location Information:Main Campus - Engineering Classroom Wing (View Map) 1111 Engineering DR 51´«Ã½, CO Room: 265Contact
- Event Description:Radu Craiu, Department of Statistical Sciences, University of Toronto Adaptive Strategies for Component-Wise Metropolis-Hastings Adaptive ideas within the MCMC universe are ubiquitous. However, proving the validity of an adaptive
- Event Description:R. Tyrell Rockafellar, Department of Mathematics, University of WashingtonRisk, Optimization and Statistics Uncertainty over the future, even if well supported by statistical information, causes a fundamental difficulty in
- Event Description:John Hunter; Department of Mathematics; University of California, DavisNonlinear surface plasmons Surface plasmons (SPs) are electromagnetic surface waves that propagate on the interface between an insulator and a conductor, such