Computer Science Department, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels
Archive for the ‘KAIST Discrete Math Seminar’ Category
Tillmann Miltzow, The Art Gallery Problem is ∃R-complete
Tuesday, June 26th, 2018Computer Science Department, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels
(Intensive Lecture Series) Ron Aharoni, Lectures on topological methods in combinatorics
Wednesday, June 20th, 2018Intensive Lecture Series
Department of Mathematics, Technion, Israel
Topics that will be covered:
– A topological extension of Hall’s theorem
– combinatorial applications of the nerve theorem
– d-Leray complexes and rainbow matchings
– Matroid complexes and applications
– Open problems
(Intensive Lecture Series) Jaehoon Kim, A course in graph embedding
Saturday, May 19th, 2018Intensive Lecture Series
School of Mathematics, Birmingham University, Birmingham, UK
In this lecture, we aim to learn several techniques to find sufficient conditions on a dense graph G to contain a sparse graph H as a subgraph.
Lecture note (PDF file)
Tentative plan for the course (June 25, 26, 27, 28, 29)
Lecture 1 : Basic probabilistic methods
Lecture 2 : Extremal number of graphs
Lecture 3 : Extremal number of even cycles
Lecture 4 : Dependent random choice
Lecture 5 : The regularity lemma and its applications
Lecture 6 : Embedding large graphs
Lecture 7 : The blow-up lemma and its applications I
Lecture 8 : The blow-up lemma and its applications II
Lecture 9 : The absorbing method I
Lecture 10 : The absorbing method II
Jinyoung Park (박진영), Coloring hypercubes
Wednesday, May 16th, 2018Department of Mathematics, Rutgers, Piscataway, NJ, USA
given q colors. When q=2, it is easy to see that there are only 2
possible colorings. However, it is already highly nontrivial to figure
out the number of colorings when q=3. Since Galvin (2002) proved the
asymptotics of the number of 3-colorings, the rest cases remained open
so far. In this talk, I will introduce a recent work on the number of
4-colorings, mainly focusing on how entropy can be used in counting.
This is joint work with Jeff Kahn.
Eric Vigoda, Learning a graph via random colorings
Tuesday, May 15th, 2018College of Computing, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA
This is joint work with Antonio Blanca, Zongchen Chen, and Daniel Stefankovic.