Seminar Event Detail


Applied Interdisciplinary Mathematics (AIM)

Date:  Friday, April 15, 2016
Location:  1084 East Hall (3:00 PM to 4:00 PM)

Title:  Universality laws for randomized dimension reduction

Abstract:   Dimension reduction is the process of embedding high-dimensional data into a lower dimensional space to facilitate its analysis. In the Euclidean setting, one fundamental technique for dimension reduction is to apply a random linear map to the data. The question is how large the embedding dimension must be to ensure that randomized dimension reduction succeeds with high probability. This talk describes a phase transition in the behavior of the dimension reduction map as the embedding dimension increases. The location of this phase transition is universal for a large class of datasets and random dimension reduction maps. Furthermore, the stability properties of randomized dimension reduction are also universal. These results have many applications in numerical analysis, signal processing, and statistics. Joint work with Samet Oymak.

Files:


Speaker:  Joel Tropp
Institution:  Caltech

Event Organizer:   Anna Gilbert   

 

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