Tuesday, August 13 |
07:30 - 09:00 |
Breakfast (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |
09:00 - 10:00 |
Seonghyeon Jeong: Optimal Transportation problem on a surface of a convex body without twisted condition. ↓ Regularity of solutions of optimal transportation problems was well studied with its relation to the Monge-Ampere type equations. There are several conditions such as the Twisted condition or MTW condition, in which we need to use the Monge-Ampere type equations to study the regularity of optimal transportation problems. However, we can easily come up with examples which do not satisfy such conditions. In this talk, we consider the optimal transportation problem on a boundary of a convex body with Euclidean distance squared cost function. This problem does not satisfy twisted conditions. We discuss how to get regularity in this case. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
10:00 - 10:30 |
Henok Mawi: Optimal Transport in the Design of Freeform Optical Surfaces ↓ The theory of optimal transport has been used successfully to model several freeform lens design problems. A freeform optical surface, refers to an optical surface (lens or mirror) whose shape lacks rotational symmetry. The use of such surfaces allows design of spatially efficient optical devices. In this talk, we exhibit the existence of a far field refracting lens between two anisotropic media by using optimal transport framework. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
10:30 - 11:00 |
Coffee Break (Conference Room San Felipe) |
11:00 - 12:00 |
René Cabrera: An optimal transport problem with interaction effects ↓ I will talk about a modification of the Monge-Kantorovich problem taking into account interaction effects via path dependency between particles. We prove the existence of solutions under mild conditions on the data, and after imposing stronger conditions, we characterize the minimizers by relating them to an auxiliary Monge-Kantorovich problem of the more standard kind. With this notion of how particles interact and travel along paths, we produce a dual problem. The main novelty here is to incorporate an interaction effect to the optimal path transport problem. Lastly, our results include an extension of Brenier's theorem on optimal transport maps and a formulation of the celebrated Benamou-Brenier theory with interaction effects. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
12:00 - 12:30 |
Héctor Chang-Lara: A dynamic model of congestion ↓ We will address the problem of assigning optimal routes in a graph that transport two given densities over the nodes. The occupation of each edge at a given time defines a metric over this graph, for which the routes must be geodesics. This model may describe for example the congestion of a city and its solutions are known as Wardrop equilibria. Additionally, a central planner can require that the assignment is efficient, meaning it minimizes the Kantorovich functional arising from this metric. In this presentation, we will characterize this problem in terms of a partial differential equation and illustrate a simple case. This work is a collaboration with Sergio Zapeta Tzul, a former MSc student at CIMAT and current PhD student at the University of Minnesota. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
12:30 - 13:30 |
Alpár Mészáros: From the porous medium equation to the Hele-Shaw flow: an optimal transport perspective ↓ In this talk we will revisit the classical problem on the Hele-Shaw or incompressible limit for nonlinear degenerate diffusion equations. We will demonstrate that the theory of optimal transport via gradient flows can bring new perspectives, when it comes to considering confining potentials or nonlocal drift terms within the problem. In particular, we provide quantitative convergence rates in the 2-Wasserstein distance for the singular limit, which are global in time thanks to the contractive property arising from the external potentials. The talk will be based on a recent joint work with Noemi David and Filippo Santambrogio. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
13:30 - 15:00 |
Lunch (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |
15:00 - 15:30 |
Sangmin Park: A variational perspective on the Vlasov-Fokker-Planck equation ↓ It is well-known that the Vlasov-Fokker-Planck equation can be formally seen as a dissipative Hamiltonian system in the Wasserstein space of probability measures. In order to better understand this geometric formalism, we propose a time discrete variational scheme whose solution converges to the weak solution of the Vlasov-Fokker-Planck equation.
In this talk, we will discuss how the variational scheme can be seen as an implementation of the symplectic Euler scheme in the Wasserstein space. Moreover, we will see that the energy functionals involved in each variational problem are geodesically convex with respect to the metric. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
15:30 - 16:00 |
Kerrek Stinson: Some geometric perspectives for adversarial training: Perimeters and Mean Curvature Flows. ↓ Recent work views adversarial training for binary classification as the minimization of a fidelity term and a non-local perimeter, opening the door to geometric perspectives. As the adversarial budget vanishes, we show that the non-local perimeter Gamma-converges to an anisotropic perimeter that reflects the stability of adversarial training. Interpreting the full adversarial training problem is a bit tricky. We can rely on a source condition or, alternatively, take a dynamic approach. For the latter, we introduce a slight modification of the adversarial training scheme, which can be seen as a minimizing movements scheme for the non-local perimeter functional. From this, we draw rigorous connections to a weighted mean curvature flow, indicating that the efficacy of adversarial training may be due to locally minimizing the length of the decision boundary. This is joint work with Leon Bungert (Wuerzburg) and Tim Laux (Regensburg). (Conference Room San Felipe) |
16:00 - 16:30 |
Coffee Break (Conference Room San Felipe) |
16:30 - 17:00 |
Zhonggan Huang: Regularity theory of a gradient degenerate Neumann problem ↓ We study the regularity and comparison principle for a gradient degenerate Neumann problem. The problem is a generalization of the Signorini or thin obstacle problem which appears in the study of certain singular anisotropic free boundary problems arising from homogenization. In scaling terms, the problem is critical since the gradient degeneracy and the Neumann PDE operator are of the same order. We show the (optimal) C1,12 regularity in dimension d=2 and we show the same regularity result in dimension d>2 conditional on the assumption that the degenerate values of the solution do not accumulate. We also prove a comparison principle characterizing minimal supersolutions, which we believe will have applications to homogenization and other related scaling limits. This is joint work with Will Feldman. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
19:00 - 21:00 |
Dinner (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |