Joint Mathematics Meetings AMS Special Session
Current as of Saturday, January 13, 2024 03:30:05
- Program
- ·
- Deadlines
- ·
- Timetable
- ·
- Inquiries: meet@ams.org
2024 Joint Mathematics Meetings (JMM 2024)
- Moscone North/South, Moscone Center, San Francisco, CA
- January 3-6, 2024 (Wednesday - Saturday)
- Meeting #1192
Associate Secretary for the AMS Scientific Program:
Michelle Ann Manes, American Institute of Mathematics mmanes@secretariat.ams.org
AMS Special Session on Combinatorics for Science
-
Friday January 5, 2024, 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
AMS Special Session on Combinatorics for Science, I
Historically, scientific computing focused on methods for forward/backward evolution of PDEs describing continuous time/space systems. Recently, combinatorial methods (clustering, weighted cliques, graph neural networks, non-crossing pairings, etc.) are becoming more prominent in scientific workflows (identifying molecular conformational states, discovering climate phenomena, predicting drug interactions, etc.). This session surveys recent applications of combinatorics to science.
Room 309, The Moscone Center
Organizers:
Stephen J Young, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory stephen.young@pnnl.gov
Bill Kay, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Sinan Aksoy, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
-
1:00 p.m.
Energy-Efficient Algorithms
Erik Demaine*, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(1192-68-30649) -
1:30 p.m.
Combinatorial Models for Genome Rearrangement
Lora Bailey, Grand Valley State University
Heather Smith Blake*, Davidson College
Garner Cochran, Berry College
Nathan Harel Fox, Canisius College
Michael Levet, College of Charleston
Reem Mahmoud, Virginia Commonwealth University
Elizabeth Matson, Alfred University
Inne Singgih, University of Cincinnati
Grace Stadnyk, Furman University
Elena Wang, Michigan State University
Alexander Wiedemann, Randolph-Macon College
(1192-05-31832) -
2:00 p.m.
Distilling Mechanistic Models From Multi-Omics Data
Samantha Erwin*, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
(1192-92-31923) -
2:30 p.m.
Graph-theoretic analysis and modeling of complex systems in fluid dynamics and mycology
Muralikrishnan Gopalakrishnan Meena*, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
(1192-05-30243) -
3:00 p.m.
Turbulence through the Lens of Graph Theory
Aditya G. Nair, University of Nevada, Reno
Kunihiko Taira*, University of California, Los Angeles
(1192-05-28647) -
3:30 p.m.
Quantum Dynamical Semigroups: Connections to Digraph Theory
George Androulakis, University of South Carolina
Alexander Wiedemann*, Randolph-Macon College
(1192-05-31349) -
4:00 p.m.
Quantum Expressiveness
Mackenzie Bookamer, Tulane University
Natalie Robin Dodson, Middlebury College
Medha Durisheti*, Virginia Tech
Carmen Jackson, Northwestern University
(1192-05-32433) -
4:30 p.m.
Formal Verification, Distributed Computing, and Path Planning Algorithms
Esther Dawn Conrad, NASA Langley Research Center
Aaron Michael Dutle*, NASA Langley Research Center
(1192-05-31075)
-
1:00 p.m.
-
Saturday January 6, 2024, 8:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.
AMS Special Session on Combinatorics for Science, II
Historically, scientific computing focused on methods for forward/backward evolution of PDEs describing continuous time/space systems. Recently, combinatorial methods (clustering, weighted cliques, graph neural networks, non-crossing pairings, etc.) are becoming more prominent in scientific workflows (identifying molecular conformational states, discovering climate phenomena, predicting drug interactions, etc.). This session surveys recent applications of combinatorics to science.
Room 309, The Moscone Center
Organizers:
Stephen J Young, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory stephen.young@pnnl.gov
Bill Kay, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Sinan Aksoy, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
-
8:00 a.m.
Some New Techniques for the Resolution of the Exceptional Almost Perfect Nonlinear Conjecture
Carlos A. Agrinsoni*, Department of Mathematics, Purdue University
Moises R. Delgado, University of Puerto Rico, Cayey
Heeralal Janwa, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras
(1192-11-33193) -
8:30 a.m.
Some combinatorial problems in quantum computing
Nathan Lemons*, Los Alamos National Laboratory
(1192-05-32288) -
9:00 a.m.
Computing Quantum Strategies for Non-Local Games
Carlos M Ortiz-Marrero*, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
(1192-81-31339) -
9:30 a.m.
Combinatorics and Quantum Fault Tolerance
Jessalyn Bolkema*, California State University, Dominguez Hills
(1192-81-31659) -
10:00 a.m.
Algebraic Graph Theory Concepts in the Science of Security and Resilience
Sandip Roy*, Texas A&M University
(1192-05-31265) -
10:30 a.m.
Adaptive Covers for Ball Mapper
Enrique Guadalupe Alvarado, UC Davis
Robin Belton, Smith College
Emily Fischer, Wheaton College
Kang-Ju Lee, Seoul National University
Sourabh Palande, Department of Computational Mathematics, Science & Engineering, Michigan State University
Sarah Percival*, Michigan State University
Emilie Purvine, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
(1192-62-30005) -
11:00 a.m.
Community Detection in Hypergraphs via Mutual Information Maximization
Oliver Andres Alvarado Rodriguez, New Jersey Institute of Technology
Ilya Amburg, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Jessalyn Bolkema, California State University, Dominguez Hills
Philip Chodrow, Middlebury College
Thomas Grubb, UC San Diego
Daniel Kaiser, Indiana University
Bill Kay, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Jurgen Kritschgau*, Portland State University
Fangfei Lan, University of Utah
Sepideh Maleki, University of Texas
(1192-05-31658) -
11:30 a.m.
Nonlinear and Combinatorial Optimization
Sven Leyffer*, Argonne National Laboratory
(1192-90-27301)
-
8:00 a.m.
-
Saturday January 6, 2024, 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
AMS Special Session on Combinatorics for Science, III
Historically, scientific computing focused on methods for forward/backward evolution of PDEs describing continuous time/space systems. Recently, combinatorial methods (clustering, weighted cliques, graph neural networks, non-crossing pairings, etc.) are becoming more prominent in scientific workflows (identifying molecular conformational states, discovering climate phenomena, predicting drug interactions, etc.). This session surveys recent applications of combinatorics to science.
Room 309, The Moscone Center
Organizers:
Stephen J Young, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory stephen.young@pnnl.gov
Bill Kay, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Sinan Aksoy, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
-
1:00 p.m.
Transportation matchings with bounded distances
Alexander Panchenko*, Washington State University
(1192-65-31272) -
1:30 p.m.
Reimagining Spectral Graph Theory
Sinan Aksoy, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Alyson Bittner, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Bill Kay, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Stephen J Young*, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
(1192-05-31502) -
2:00 p.m.
Enhanced Molecular Graph Embeddings with Inner Product Laplacians
Sinan Aksoy, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Helen Jenne, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Bill Kay, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Hyungro Lee, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Jenna Pope*, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Madelyn Shapiro, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Stephen J Young, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
(1192-05-31237) -
2:30 p.m.
Directed Graph Augmentation for Improved Performance in Message Passing Graph Neural Networks
James Clayton Kerce*, Georgia Tech Research Institute
(1192-05-32628) -
3:00 p.m.
Spaces of RNA branching configurations
Christine Heitsch*, Georgia Institute of Technology
(1192-92-32131) -
3:30 p.m.
The arithmetic topology of genetic alignments
Qijun He*, University of Virginia
(1192-05-29080) -
4:00 p.m.
Partitioning models for obtaining special sparse matrix structures
Reha Oguz Selvitopi*, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
(1192-05-31835) -
4:30 p.m.
The Ubiquitous Sparse Matrix-Matrix Products
Aydin Buluc*, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
(1192-68-32056)
-
1:00 p.m.