COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Isaac Newton Institute Seminar Series > Algebraic and Geometric Ideas in Discrete Optimisation II
Algebraic and Geometric Ideas in Discrete Optimisation IIAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Mustapha Amrani. Polynomial Optimisation It is common knowledge that the understanding of the combinatorial geometry of convex bodies has helped speed up algorithms in discrete optimization. For example, cutting planes and facet-description of polyhedra have been crucial in the success of branch-and-bound algorithms for mixed integer linear programming. Another example, is how the ellipsoid method can be used to prove polynomiality results in combinatorial optimization. For the future, the importance of algebraic-combinatorial geometry in optimization appears even greater. In the past 5 years advances in algebraic-geometric algorithms have been used to prove unexpected new results on the computation of non-linear integer programs. These lectures will introduce the audience to new techniques. I will describe several algorithms and explain why we can now prove theorems that were beyond our reach before, mostly about integer optimization with non-linear objectives. I will also describe attempts to turn these two algorithms into practical computation, not just in theoretical results. This a nice story collecting results by various authors and now contained in our monograph recently published by SIAM -MOS. This talk is part of the Isaac Newton Institute Seminar Series series. This talk is included in these lists:
Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
Other listsCambridge Networks and Communications meeting Cambridge Climate and Sustainability Forum Nonlinear Waves The Crisis of Democracy? Evidence from the Post-Communist World SPI Organic ChemistryOther talksGraph Legendrians and SL2 local systems Challenges to monetary policy in a global context Pruning and grafting syntactic trees for cross-lingual transfer tasks Tunable Functional Magnetic Skyrmions at Room Temperature Wetting and elasticity: 2 experimental illustrations Decision Theory for AI safety Coatable photovoltaics (Title t o be confirmed) Single Cell Seminars (October) Formation and disease relevance of axonal endoplasmic reticulum, a "neuron within a neuron”. 'The Japanese Mingei Movement and the art of Katazome' Scale and anisotropic effects in necking of metallic tensile specimens Prof Kate Jones (UCL): Biodiversity & Conservation |