2007-2008 seminars

Oct
16
2007

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar II

Sparse Random Linear Codes are Locally Decodable and Testable
10:30am|S-101

We show that random sparse binary linear codes are locally testable and locally decodable (under any linear encoding) with constant queries (with probability tending to one). By sparse, we mean that the code should have only polynomially many...

Oct
15
2007

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar I

Extractors and Rank Extractors for Polynomial Sources
11:15am|S-101

In this work we construct explicit deterministic extractors from polynomial sources, namely from distributions sampled by low degree multivariate polynomials over finite fields. This naturally generalizes previous work on extraction from affine...

Oct
09
2007

Arithmetic Combinatorics

On Square Sum-Free Sets
2:00pm|S-101

Let A be subset of {1,...,n}. We say that A is square sum-free if the sum of any two different elements of A is not a square. Erdos and Sarkozy asked whether a square sum-free set can have more than n(1/3+epsilon) elements (motivated by the sequence...

Oct
08
2007

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar I

Erdos-Renyi Phase Transition
11:15am|S-101

In their great 1960 paper "On the Evolution of Random Graphs" Paul Erdos and Alfred Renyi expresses a special interest in the behavior of the random graph G(n,p) when np was near one. Today we view it through the prism of Percolation Theory. Write c...

Oct
02
2007

Arithmetic Combinatorics

Difference Sets and the Primes
2:00pm|S-101

We shall discuss joint work with I Z Ruzsa in which it is shown that if A is a subset of {1,..,N} such that its difference set contains no number of the form $p-1$ for $p$ a prime, then $|A|=O(N\exp(-c\sqrt{4}{\log N}))$ for some absolute $c>0$.

Oct
02
2007

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar II

Unbounded-Error Communication Complexity of Symmetric Functions
Alexander Sherstov
10:30am|S-101

The sign-rank of a real matrix M is the least rank of a matrix R in which every entry has the same sign as the Corresponding entry of M. We determine the sign-rank of every matrix of the form M=[ D(|x AND y|) ]_{x,y}, where D:{0,1,...,n}->{-1,+1} is...