• Colloquium: Dr. Emmanuel Asante-Asamani

    EMS Building, EMS E495 3200 Cramer St, Milwaukee, WI, United States

    A Mechanochemical Model of Cell Migration in Confined Environments Dr. Emmanuel Asante-Asamani Assistant Professor of Mathematics Clarkson University Eukaryotic cells can move in confined environments by using pressure driven protrusions of their cell membrane, a motility mechanism known as blebbing. …

  • Graduate Student Colloquium: Dorian Smith

    EMS Building, Room E495 E495; 3200 N Cramer St., Milwaukee, WI, United States

    On the Lucky and Displacement Statistics of Stirling Permutations Dorian Smith PhD Student University of Minnesota Twin Cities Stirling permutations are parking functions. We investigate two parking function statistics in the context of these objects: lucky cars and displacement. Among …

  • Colloquium: Dr. Jean-Pierre Mutunguha

    EMS Building, EMS E495 3200 Cramer St, Milwaukee, WI, United States

    The Dynamical view of Free-by-Cyclic Groups Dr. Jean Pierre Mutanguha Instructor Princeton Free-by-cyclic groups can be defined as mapping tori of free group automorphisms. I will discuss various dynamical properties of automorphisms that turn out to be group invariants of …

  • Graduate Student Colloquium: Daniel Quigley

    EMS Building, Room E495 E495; 3200 N Cramer St., Milwaukee, WI, United States

    A Primer on the Mathematics of Artificial Neural Networks Daniel Quigley PhD Student University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Artificial neural networks (ANNs, or, simply, neural networks) are ubiquitous, not least of all in the context of modern machine learning. This presentation is …

  • Colloquium: Dr. Jay Pantone

    EMS Building, EMS E495 3200 Cramer St, Milwaukee, WI, United States

    Experimental Methods in Combinatorics Dr. Jay Pantone Assistant Professor of Mathematics Marquette University What number comes next in the sequence 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, ... ? How about 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, ... ? Or maybe …

  • Marden Lecture: Professor Caroline J Klivans

    Lubar Hall N140 3202 N Maryland Ave, Milwaukee, WI, United States

    The intrigue that compels us  When we witness unexpected phenomena, a mathematician finds themselves asking: why?  We are compelled to understand further; what is the cause, the basic underlying principles?   Mathematics is full of symmetries, patterns and visuals that …

  • Marden Special Topics Seminar: Prof. Caroline Klivans

    EMS Building, EMS E495 3200 Cramer St, Milwaukee, WI, United States

    The Mathematics of Chip-Firing Caroline Klivans Professor of Applied Mathematics, Deputy Director of ICERM Brown University Chip-firing processes are discrete dynamical systems. A commodity (chips, sand, dollars) is exchanged between sites of a network according to simple local rules. Although …

  • Graduate Student Colloquium: Kimberly Hadaway

    EMS Building, Room E495 E495; 3200 N Cramer St., Milwaukee, WI, United States

    On Combinatorial Problems of Generalized Parking Functions Kimberly Hadaway PhD Student Iowa State University In this talk, we study combinatorial problems related to generalized parking functions. Our work is motivated by two different research questions posed to us by Dr. …

  • Colloquium: Prof. Yoichiro Mori

    EMS Building, EMS E495 3200 Cramer St, Milwaukee, WI, United States

    Mathematical Modeling of Cell Volume Control and Electrolyte Balance Prof. Yoichiro Mori Professor of Mathematics University of Pennsylvania Electrolyte and cell volume regulation is essential in physiological systems. Biophysical modeling in this area, however, has been relatively sparse. After a …