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October 05, 2015
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Date:03ThursdayApril 2025Lecture
Geometric Functional Analysis and Probability Seminar
More information Time 13:30 - 14:30Title The Campaign model and dynamical noise sensitivityLocation Jacob Ziskind Building
Room 155 - חדר 155Lecturer Guy Blachar
WISOrganizer Department of MathematicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about We study opinion dynamics on finite graphs. One of the class...» We study opinion dynamics on finite graphs. One of the classical examples is the voter model, in which each vertex is given some initial opinion, and opinions evolve with time by interactions between neighbouring vertices in which one side convinces the other. It is not hard to see that on a finite graph, the system will eventually reach a consensus, which can be seen as the output of this system.
In this talk we will introduce a new opinion dynamics model, which we call the Campaign model. In this model vertices interact as in the voter model but for a limited amount of time T ("the campaign"), and then a majority vote is taken ("elections"). The behaviour of this model depends on some geometric properties of the underlying graph.
We will discuss the behaviour of the Campaign model, and in particular ask at which times T the system loses correlation to the majority of the initial opinions. Next, we will study the dynamical noise sensitivity of the model, and ask when it exhibits a non-trivial threshold when noising the dynamics.
This is a joint work in progress with Gideon Amir, Omer Angel and Omri Marcus. -
Date:03ThursdayApril 2025Lecture
The Nexus of Genome Stability, Cancer, Senescence, and Aging: New Insights, New Players
More information Time 14:00 - 15:00Location Max and Lillian Candiotty Building
AuditoriumLecturer Prof. Yosef Shilo Organizer Moross Integrated Cancer Center (MICC) -
Date:06SundayApril 2025Conference
Mind the Science in Honor of Nir Friedman
More information Time 08:30 - 17:30Title Mind the Science in Honor of Nir FriedmanLocation The David Lopatie Conference CentreChairperson Steffen JungHomepage Contact -
Date:06SundayApril 2025Lecture
MIND THE SCIENCE II in memory of Nir Friedman
More information Time 09:15 - 16:55Location The David Lopatie Conference Centre
Conference CentreHomepage Contact -
Date:06SundayApril 2025Lecture
Department of Molecular Genetics Student Seminars 2024-25
More information Time 13:00 - 13:30Title Unraveling the molecular and structural mechanisms of zebrafish chromatophore plasticityLocation Botnar auditoriumLecturer Yael Noy -
Date:06SundayApril 2025Lecture
Department of Molecular Genetics Student Seminars 2024-25
More information Time 13:30 - 14:00Title Transgene-Free Generation of Post-Gastrulation Mouse Whole Embryo Models Derived Solely from Naïve ESCsLocation Botnar auditoriumLecturer Gulben Gurhan-Sevinc -
Date:07MondayApril 2025Colloquia
Sustainable (Solar) Energy and Electronics need Sustainable Materials
More information Time 11:00 - 12:15Location Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture HallLecturer Prof. David Cahen Homepage Abstract Show full text abstract about To reach real sustainability for today’s preferred ‘sustaina...» To reach real sustainability for today’s preferred ‘sustainable’ types of energy, viz. electrical ones as solar (photovoltaic, PV, & wind; thermal solar & hydroelectric, which also store) and chemical ones as reduced CO2 [food], H2 & batteries, also the enabling materials need to be sustainable. Alas, mostly they are not, and that is a problem. As sustainability implies long life spans, it is thought to be incompatible with modern society’s pillars of continuing growth & consumerism. This is a serious issue that, while outside the scope of this lecture, adds to the science & technology challenge to return to repairable devices, and repair-friendly designs, with as best option self-healing,** the most relevant option for micro- and macro-electronic device materials. The sustainable materials challenge is reminiscent of the sustainable energy one, i.e., we need to go from science fiction to reality. Starting with bio-solar conversion, via ionics and organic material self-healing, we get to inorganic light ßà electricity conversion compounds. Emphasis will be on PV materials, as in hindsight those already provide (confirm) some material self-healing criteria. Once (many) more experimental properties data will become available (& accessible), deep learning may guide further discovery. -
Date:07MondayApril 2025Lecture
Foundations of Computer Science Seminar
More information Time 11:15 - 12:15Title Analytic Insights into the Zig-Zag Product and Its FriendsLocation Jacob Ziskind Building
Room 1 - 1 חדרLecturer Gil Cohen
Tel Aviv UniversityOrganizer Department of Computer Science and Applied MathematicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about The well-known Zig-Zag product and related graph operators, ...» The well-known Zig-Zag product and related graph operators, like derandomized squaring, are fundamentally combinatorial in nature. Classical bounds on their behavior often rely on a mix of combinatorics and linear algebra. However, these traditional bounds are not tight and frequently fail to align with experimental results. In this talk, we will present a more refined analysis that utilizes the full spectrum of the graph, rather than relying solely on its spectral expansion. This approach produces results that both match experimental observations and, in a sense, are proved to be optimal. Our technique is analytic, diverging from classical methods: for the upper bound, we apply finite free probability, while for the lower bound, we draw on results from analytic combinatorics.
Based on joint works with Itay Cohen, Gal Maor and Yuval Peled. No prior knowledge is required. -
Date:07MondayApril 2025Lecture
Midrasha on Groups Seminar
More information Time 11:15 - 13:00Title Property (T) and it's relation to lattices, expanders, and the Ruziewicz problem for n ≥ 4: Part 2Location Elaine and Bram Goldsmith Building for Mathematics and Computer Sciences
Room 208 - חדר 208Lecturer Tomer Konforty
TAUOrganizer Department of MathematicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about This is the second of a two-part talk covering pages 19–30 o...» This is the second of a two-part talk covering pages 19–30 of [Lub] -
Date:07MondayApril 2025Lecture
Midrasha on Groups Seminar
More information Time 14:15 - 16:00Title Faithful invariant random subgroups in acylindrically hyperbolic groupsLocation Jacob Ziskind Building
Room 1 - 1 חדרLecturer Yair Glasner
BGUOrganizer Department of MathematicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about I will show that every acylindrically hyperbolic group Γ adm...» I will show that every acylindrically hyperbolic group Γ admits a weakly mixing probability measure preserving action which is faithful but not essentially free. In other words, Γ admits a weakly mixing nontrivial faithful IRS. I will also show that every hyperbolic group admits a characteristic random subgroup with the same properties. Both results rely on works of Sun and Kechris–Quorning.
This is a joint work with Anton Hase. -
Date:07MondayApril 2025Cultural Events
Halisa | Sophie Artus
More information Time 20:00 - 21:45Location Michael Sela AuditoriumHomepage Contact -
Date:09WednesdayApril 2025Colloquia
Immunology and Regenerative Biology Colloquium
More information Time 11:00 - 12:00Title Extremotolerance - Life at the EdgeLocation Max and Lillian Candiotty Building
AuditoriumLecturer Prof. Alwin Köhler Organizer Department of Immunology and Regenerative BiologyContact -
Date:10ThursdayApril 2025Lecture
Vision and AI
More information Time 12:15 - 13:15Title From Pixels to Motion: A Journey Towards Foundational Video ModelsLocation Jacob Ziskind Building
Room 1 - 1 חדרLecturer Hila Chefer
Tel Aviv UniversityOrganizer Department of Computer Science and Applied MathematicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Recent advancements in visual content generation have made i...» Recent advancements in visual content generation have made it easier than ever to generate remarkable imagery, often limited only by one’s imagination. However, unlike images, video generation requires both spatial and, critically, temporal understanding, posing unique and exciting challenges for existing models.
In this talk, I will explore key milestones in achieving coherent video generation through the lens of my works in the field. Each work tackles a different aspect of video generation, from temporal aliasing to video customization and motion comprehension. For each, I will first analyze prior approaches and identify key failure modes that lead to spatial or temporal incoherence. I will then present solutions based on the analyses to mitigate these issues—without requiring any additional data or model scaling. Finally, I will discuss open challenges and propose directions for future research.
Bio:
Hila is a PhD candidate at Tel Aviv University, advised by Prof. Lior Wolf. Her research focuses on understanding, interpreting, and correcting the predictions of deep foundational models. During her PhD, she interned at Google Research, Google DeepMind, and Meta AI, where she worked on video generation. Hila has received several awards, including the Fulbright Postdoctoral Fellowship, the Eric and Wendy Schmidt Postdoctoral Award, the Deutsch Prize for Outstanding PhD Students, and the Council for Higher Education (VATAT) Award for Outstanding PhD Students. -
Date:10ThursdayApril 2025Lecture
Geometric Functional Analysis and Probability Seminar
More information Time 13:30 - 14:30Title Fixed and periodic points of a non-linear spherical Radon transformLocation Jacob Ziskind Building
Room 155 - חדר 155Lecturer Emanuel Milman
TechnionOrganizer Department of MathematicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Let $\mathcal{R} : L^\infty(\mathbb{S}^{n-1}) \rightarrow L^...» Let $\mathcal{R} : L^\infty(\mathbb{S}^{n-1}) \rightarrow L^\infty(\mathbb{S}^{n-1})$ denote the spherical Radon transform, defined as $\mathcal{R}(f)(\theta) = \int_{\mathbb{S}^{n-1} \cap \theta^{\perp}} f(u) d\sigma(u)$. A long-standing question in non-linear harmonic analysis due to Lutwak, Gardner, and Fish--Nazarov--Ryabogin--Zvavitch, is to characterize those non-negative $\rho \in L^\infty(\mathbb{S}^{n-1})$ so that $\mathcal{R}(\rho^{n-1}) = c \rho$ when $n\geq 3$. We show that this holds iff $\rho$ is constant, and moreover, $\mathcal{R}(\mathcal{R}(\rho^{n-1})^{n-1}) = c \rho$ iff $\rho$ is either identically zero or is the reciprocal of some Euclidean norm. Our proof recasts the problem in a geometric language using the intersection body operator $I$, introduced by Lutwak following the work of Busemann, which plays a central role in the dual Brunn-Minkowski theory. We show that for any star-body $K$ in $\mathbb{R}^n$ when $n \geq 3$, $I^2 K = c K$ iff $K$ is a centered ellipsoid, and hence $I K = c K$ iff $K$ is a centered Euclidean ball. To this end, we interpret the iterated intersection body equation as an Euler-Lagrange equation for a certain volume functional under radial perturbations, derive new formulas for the volume of $I K$, and introduce a continuous version of Steiner symmetrization for Lipschitz star-bodies, which (surprisingly) yields a useful radial perturbation exactly when $n\geq 3$.
Joint work with Shahar Shabelman and Amir Yehudayoff. -
Date:10ThursdayApril 2025Lecture
Molecular principles underlying aggressive cancers
More information Time 14:00 - 15:00Location Max and Lillian Candiotty Building
AudtoriumLecturer Dr. Ruth Nussinov Organizer Dwek Institute for Cancer Therapy Research -
Date:10ThursdayApril 2025Colloquia
Double Scaled SYK, Infinite Temperature, de Sitter Space, and One-Plus-One QCD.
More information Time 16:00 - 17:30Title Virtual Physics ColloquiumLocation Via ZoomLecturer Prof. Leonard Suskind
Session ID: 955 0510 1092Passcode: 666666Organizer Department of Condensed Matter PhysicsAbstract Show full text abstract about I will explain the conjectured duality between double-scaled...» I will explain the conjectured duality between double-scaled SYKat infinite temperature and the static patch of a particularversion of JT-de Sitter space. The conjectured duality raises thequestion of what particle physics is like in the bulk of the staticpatch.The answer: I will give it in the lecture. -
Date:10ThursdayApril 2025Cultural Events
London National Theatre Live on Screen | The Importance of Being Earnest
More information Time 20:00 - 23:00Location Michael Sela AuditoriumHomepage Contact -
Date:20SundayApril 2025Lecture
The Clore Center for Biological Physics
More information Time 12:45 - 14:30Title Horizontal Gene Transfer Networks: A Physics Perspective on Bacterial EvolutionLocation Nella and Leon Benoziyo Physics LibraryLecturer Dr. Michael Sheinman
Lunch at 12:45Contact Abstract Show full text abstract about Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is a central mechanism in bac...» Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is a central mechanism in bacterial evolution, allowing organisms to exchange genetic material outside of traditional reproduction. This process is a key driver of antibiotic resistance and the emergence of virulence traits.Unlike vertical inheritance, HGT leads to non-tree-like evolutionary relationships, motivating a network-based view of microbial evolution.In this talk I will present a minimal model for HGT and show how it captures distinctive statistical features of bacterial genomes. By combining the model with the genomic data, I infer general properties of the underlying HGT networks. FOR THE LATEST UPDATES AND CONTENT ON SOFT MATTER AND BIOLOGICAL PHYSICS AT THE WEIZMANN, VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://www.biosoftweizmann.com/ -
Date:20SundayApril 2025Lecture
Department of Molecular Genetics Student Seminars 2024-25
More information Time 13:00 - 13:30Title From Tendon to Bone—Enthesis Development Is Orchestrated by Runx1 and Alternating Genetic ProgramsLocation Botnar auditoriumLecturer Ron Vinestock -
Date:20SundayApril 2025Lecture
Department of Molecular Genetics Student Seminars 2024-25
More information Time 13:30 - 14:00Title Creation and Validation of a Proteome-Wide Yeast Library for Protein Detection and AnalysisLocation Botnar auditoriumLecturer Din Baruch
