Séminaire des membres non-permanents
Mercredi 27 novembre 2019, 11 heures, Salle 3052
(Old) Phd Students Return of the PhD Seminar

Every new/old PhD student is invited to come and talk about her/his research interests.

Each talk will be 2-5 minutes long, and should be understandable by everyone.

Séminaire des membres non-permanents
Mercredi 20 novembre 2019, 11 heures, Salle 3052
Pierre Ohlmann (IRIF) Controlling a random population

Bertrand et al. (2017) introduced a model of parameterised systems, where each agent is represented by a finite state system, and studied the following control problem: for any number of agents, does there exist a controller able to bring all agents to a target state? They showed that the problem is decidable and EXPTIME-complete in the adversarial setting, and posed as an open problem the stochastic setting, where the agent is represented by a Markov decision process. In this paper, we show that the stochastic control problem is decidable. Our solution makes significant uses of well quasi orders, of the max-flow min- cut theorem, and of the theory of regular cost functions.

Séminaire des membres non-permanents
Mercredi 13 novembre 2019, 11 heures, Salle 3052
(New) Phd Students The PhD Seminar strikes back

Every new/old PhD student is invited to come and talk about her/his research interests.

Each talk will be 2-5 minutes long, without any slides, and should be understandable by everyone

Séminaire des membres non-permanents
Mercredi 24 juillet 2019, 11 heures, Salle 3052
Hugo Moeneclaey (IRIF) Toward a Cubical Type Theory Univalent by Definition

Univalent foundations are based on a geometric interpretation of identity types in type theory. We will explain this interpretation, then we will give a brief introduction to Cubical Type Theory and explain why it is useful in this context. Then we will present some ideas from parametricity and sketch how we are trying to use them to build a variant of Cubical Type Theory.

Séminaire des membres non-permanents
Mercredi 6 mars 2019, 11 heures, Salle 3014
Isaac Konan (IRIF) Partitions and Bijections

“For any positive integer n, there are as many partitions of n into distincts parts as partitions of n into odd parts”. This identity stated by Euler is quite trivial to prove by calculations, but not easy show bijectively.

I will discuss bijections for some well-known partition identities, such as Schur partition identity and q-binomial coefficient.

NB: Open talk, all you need is just how to count objects.

Séminaire des membres non-permanents
Mercredi 27 février 2019, 11 heures, Salle 3052
Pierre Ohlmann (IRIF) Lower bounds for arithmetic circuits via the Hankel matrix

We study the complexity of representing polynomials by arithmetic circuits in both the commutative and the non-commutative settings. Our approach goes through a precise understanding of the more restricted setting where multiplication is not associative, meaning that we distinguish (xy)z from x(yz).

Our first and main conceptual result is a characterization result: we show that the size of the smallest circuit computing a given non-associative polynomial is exactly the rank of a matrix constructed from the polynomial and called the Hankel matrix. This result applies to the class of all circuits in both commutative and non-commutative settings, and can be seen as an extension of the seminal result of Nisan giving a similar characterization for non-commutative algebraic branching programs.

The study of the Hankel matrix provides a unifying approach for proving lower bounds for polynomials in the (classical) associative setting. We demonstrate this by giving alternative proofs of recent results proving superpolynomial and exponential lower bounds for different classes of circuits as corollaries of our characterization result.

Our main technical contribution is to provide generic lower bound theorems based on analyzing and decomposing the Hankel matrix. This yields significant improvements on lower bounds for circuits with many parse trees, in both (associative) commutative and non-commutative settings. In particular in the non-commutative setting we obtain a tight result showing superpolynomial lower bounds for any class of circuits which has a small defect in the exponent of the total number of parse trees.