2004-2005 seminars

Oct
11
2004

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar I

Toward Privacy in Public Databases
Cynthia Dwork
11:15am|S-101

We will describe definitions and algorithmic results for the ``census problem''. Informally, in a census individual respondents give private information to a trusted (and trustworthy) party, who publishes a sanitized version of the data. There are...

Oct
05
2004

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar II

The Complexity of Agreement
10:30am|S-101

A celebrated 1976 theorem of Aumann asserts that honest, rational Bayesian agents will never "agree to disagree": if their opinions about any topic are common knowledge, then those opinions must be equal. Economists have written numerous papers...

Oct
04
2004

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar I

Lower Bounds for Linear Degeneracy Testing
11:15am|S-101

In the late nineties Erickson proved a remarkable lower bound on the decision tree complexity of one of the central problems of computational geometry: given $n$ numbers, do any $r$ of them add up to $0$? His lower bound of $\Omega(n^{\lceil r/2...

Sep
27
2004

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar I

On the Measure of Interesting Families via Spectral Methods
11:15am|S-101

A family of sets is called intersecting if the intersection of every two sets in the family is non empty. Many of the fundamental theorems in extremal set theory deal with the maximal size of an intersecting family under certain restrictions. A...