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Seminar on Probability Theory - summer term 2013


Time: Tuesday, 17:00-18:30
Room: C 2.09 (Mathematik), UZA4, Nordbergstraße 15, 2.OG
Organizer: Jiří Černý
First meeting: Tuesday, 12 March 2013, 17:00-18:30

Date: Speaker: Title :
Tue, 19 March
17:00-18:30
Jean-Christophe Mourrat (EPFL) Aging of spin glasses: the case of the random energy model
Abstract: Physically, glassy systems are characterized by the phenomenon of aging: over every time-scale accessible to the experiment, the properties of the system evolve without reaching equilibrium. In this talk, we will focus on the most basic mean-field model of a spin glass, called the random energy model. I will begin by describing heuristics that enable to predict the aging properties of dynamics on this model. I will then present recent rigorous results confirming these heuristics, which hold for a large class of natural dynamics. (Joint work with Pierre Mathieu.)
Tue, 16 April
17:00-18:30
David Croydon
(Warwick)
Biased random walks on random paths and critical random trees
Abstract: In this talk, I will discuss two problems that are motivated by understanding how biased random walks behave on large critical percolation clusters. Firstly, I will describe how introducing a bias slows down random walks on critical Galton-Watson branching process trees (this is joint work with Alexander Fribergh, New York University, and Takashi Kumagai, Kyoto University). Secondly, I consider the biased random walk on the range of a random walk. In this setting, I indicate how a localisation result can be proved by adapting techniques originally developed for one-dimensional random walks in random environments in Sinai's regime. In both settings, it is possible to make a precise statement about how the increasing the strength of the bias affects the long-time behaviour of the associated random walk.
Tue, 30 April
17:00-18:30
Elisabeth Prossinger Upper bounds on mixing time of Markov chains
Student presentation
Tue, 7 May
17:00-18:30
Magdalena Mujetic Lower bounds on mixing time of Markov chains
Student presentation
Tue, 14 May
17:00-18:30
Fabian Pühringer Cover times
Student presentation
Tue, 28 May
17:00-18:30
Florian Stebegg TBA
Student presentation
Tue, June 11
17:00-18:30
Balázs Ráth
(UBC)
On the geometry of correlated percolation models
Abstract:Let S denote a random subset of the Z^d nearest neighbor lattice. What do we need to assume about the law of S so that we can infer that the geometry of the unique infinite cluster of the subgraph spanned by S is similar to that of Z^d? In my talk I outline a list of "axioms" which imply the existence of a norm on R^d such that the graph distance of far away vertices in the infinite cluster of S can be well approximated by their distance with respect to this norm. Our axioms are not only satisfied by the well-known Bernoulli percolation model, but also other, more exotic models with long-range correlations, like the vacant set of random interlacements and the level sets of Gaussian free field.
The talk is based on: Alexander Drewitz, Balázs Ráth, Artem Sapozhnikov: On chemical distances and shape theorems in percolation models with long-range correlations (2012, submitted)
Tue, June 18
17:00-18:30
Jan Swart
(UTIA Prague)
Rebellious voter models
Abstract: How different should two closely related species be in order to be able to coexist without one species competing the other away? This biological question leads to the study of voter models in which minority types have an advantage and which are dual to systems of parity preserving branching and annihilating random walks. In this talk, I will review the modest mathematical progress in the study of such models that has been made in recent years and also mention some questions that are not fully understood mathematically or even on the level of nonrigorous arguments.
This is joint work with Anja Sturm (Göttingen) and Karel Vrbenský (Prague).
Tue, June 25
17:00-18:30
Andrej Depperschmidt
(Freiburg (D))
Tree-valued Fleming-Viot processes with mutation and selection
In population genetics Moran models are used to describe the evolution of types in a population of a fixed size $N$. The type of individuals may change due to mutation. Furthermore, due to selection the fitness (i.e.\ the ability to survive and produce offspring) of an individual depends on its current type. At fixed times the genealogy of such populations can be constructed using the ancestral selection graph (ASG) of Krone and Neuhauser, which generalises the Kingman coalescent.
As the population evolves its genealogy evolves as well. In the talk we describe the construction of a tree-valued version of the Fleming-Viot process with mutation and selection (TFVMS) using a well-posed martingale problem. This extends the construction of the neutral tree-valued process given in (Greven, Pfaffelhuber and Winter, 2012).
Furthermore we discuss properties of the TFVMS. In particular, as time permits, we show that some properties of the Kingman coalescent can be lifted to the tree-valued setting.

 
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