• Graduate Student Colloquium: Kim Harry

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

    A q-analog of Kostant's Weight Multiplicity Formula and a Product of Fibonacci Numbers Kim Harry PhD Graduate Student University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Using Kostant’s weight multiplicity formula, we describe and enumerate the terms contributing a nonzero value to the multiplicity of …

  • Colloquium: aBa Mbirika & Morgan Fiebig

    A graphical approach to the Fibonacci sequence (Fn) n≥0 modulo m extended to the Lucas sequences (Un(p,q))n≥0 and (Vn(P,q))n≥0 aBa Mbirika & Morgan Fiebig University of Wisconsin - Eau Claire The goal of this talk is twofold: (1) extend theory …

  • Graduate Student Colloquium: Eric Redmon

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

    Finite State Machines and Bounded Permutations Eric Redmon Graduate Student Marquette University We define a k-bounded permutation Ï€ of length n to be a permutation such that for each pair of adjacent entries $\pi$ and $\pi(i + 1)$ for $i …

  • Colloquium: Dr. Lei Hua

    Unified Tail Dependence Measures and Its Applications in High-Frequency Financial Data Dr. Lei Hua Associate Professor, Director of Statistical Consulting Service Northern Illinois University In this presentation, I will first motivate the necessity for a unified tail dependence measure, followed …

  • Colloquium: Nick Mayers

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

      Well-Behaved Kohnert Posets Dr. Nicholas Mayers Postdoctoral Research Scholar North Carolina State University Kohnert polynomials form a family of polynomials indexed by diagrams that consist of unit cells arranged in the first quadrant. Many families of well-known polynomials have …

  • Graduate Student Colloquium: Math Graduate Student Panel

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

    Graduate Student Colloquium: Math Graduate Student Panel This is our last Math Graduate Student Colloquium of the semester. We will have a panel of senior graduate students happy to discuss our experiences here in 51ÁÔÆæ's math department and answer any …

  • Colloquium: Dr. Sarah Sword

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

    Studying Successful Doctoral Students from Underrepresented Groups Dr. Sarah Sword Principal Research Scientist Education Development Center, Inc. In this talk, we will share early findings from an NSF study of 75 doctoral students and recent PhDs in mathematics from underrepresented …

  • Graduate Student Colloquium: Soft Open

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

    Graduate Student Colloquium: Soft Open This is our first Math Graduate Student Colloquium. We will be hanging out, eating snacks, and getting back into the swing of semester life. Please, join us and get a feel of what to expect …

  • Community of Practice: Introduction to Transparency in Learning and Teaching 

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

    Community of Practice: Introduction to Transparency in Learning and Teaching What is the core purpose of the assignments, tasks, and learning opportunities in our courses?  Better yet, what do our students think is the primary purpose?  In this workshop we …

  • Colloquium: Ning Wei

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

    The Impact of Ephaptic Coupling and Ionic Electrodiffusion on Arrhythmogenesis in the Heart Ning Wei Assistant Professor Purdue University Cardiac myocytes synchronize through electrical signaling to contract heart muscles, facilitated by gap junctions (GJs) in the intercalated disc (ID). GJs …