Tuesday, September 27, 2005

CMU AI seminar: A Geometric Perspective on Learning Theory and Algorithms

Who: Partha Niyogi
When: 3:30 Tuesday, 11/1/2005

Title: A Geometric Perspective on Learning Theory and Algorithms

Abstract: Increasingly, we face machine learning problems in very high dimensional spaces. We proceed with the intuition that although natural data lives in very high dimensions, they have relatively few degrees of freedom. One way to formalize this intuition is to model the data as lying on or near a low dimensional manifold embedded in the high dimensional space. This point of view leads to a new class of algorithms that are "manifold motivated" and a new set of theoretical questions that surround their analysis. A central construction in these algorithms is a graph or simplicial complex that is data-derived and we will relate the geometry of these to the geometry of the underlying manifold. Applications to embedding, clustering, classification, and semi-supervised learning will be considered.

webpage: http://people.cs.uchicago.edu/~niyogi

Mini-Bio: Partha Niyogi is Professor in Computer Science and Statistics at The University of Chicago. His research interests are in the general area of artificial intelligence with a particular focus on problems in machine learning, speech, and computational linguistics. He has a B.Tech. from IIT, Delhi, and SM. and Ph.D. from MIT.

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