NYU Tandon ECE Seminar Series on Modern AI: Robert Schapire talk

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Anna Choromanska

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Sep 13, 2022, 1:54:25 PM9/13/22
to Anna Choromanska
Dear All,

The NYU Tandon ECE Seminar Series on Modern AI is back again this Fall! The event will be held online. The first speaker of this seminar is Robert Schapire from Microsoft Research New York. He will speak on the 21st of September, at 11 am. You can connect to the talk via zoom:


The details of the event are provided below. NYU Tandon is looking forward to seeing you all!!!

Regards,

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

NYU Tandon - Born Anywhere, Made in Brooklyn

Wednesday, September 21, 2022 at 11:00am

Contact: ece-anno...@nyu.edu

RSVP

Robert Schapire
Microsoft Research

Robert Schapire is a Partner Researcher at Microsoft Research in New York City.  He received his PhD from MIT in 1991.  After a short postdoc at Harvard, he joined the technical staff at AT&T Labs (formerly AT&T Bell Laboratories) in 1991.  In 2002, he became a Professor of Computer Science at Princeton University.  He joined Microsoft Research in 2014.  His awards include the 1991 ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award, the 2003 Gödel Prize, and the 2004 Kanelakkis Theory and Practice Award (both of the last two with Yoav Freund).  He is a fellow of the AAAI, and a member of both the National Academy of Engineering and the National Academy of Sciences.  His main research interest is in theoretical and applied machine learning.

 

Convex Analysis at Infinity: An Introduction to Astral Space

Not all convex functions have finite minimizers; some can only be minimized by a sequence as it heads to infinity.  In this work, we aim to develop a theory for understanding such minimizers at infinity.  We study astral space, a compact extension of Euclidean space to which such points at infinity have been added.  Astral space is constructed to be as small as possible while still ensuring that all linear functions can be continuously extended to the new space.  Although not a vector space, nor even a metric space, astral space is nevertheless so well-structured as to allow useful and meaningful extensions of such concepts as convexity, conjugacy, and subdifferentials.  We develop these concepts and analyze various properties of convex functions on astral space, including the detailed structure of their minimizers, exact characterizations of continuity, and convergence of descent algorithms.
This is joint work with Miroslav Dudík, Ziwei Ji, and Matus Telgarsky.


This event is free and open to the public.

The Seminar Series in Modern Artificial Intelligence is held at NYU Tandon School of Engineering and is hosted by the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Organized by Professor Anna Choromanska, the series aims to bring together faculty and students to discuss the most important research trends in the world of AI. The speakers include world-renowned experts whose research is making an immense impact on the development of new machine learning techniques and technologies and helping to build a better, smarter, more-connected world.

 

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NYU Tandon School of Engineering, 1 MetroTech Center, 19th Floor, Brooklyn, NY 11201


--
Anna Choromanska

Assistant Professor

Alfred P. Sloan Fellow

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

NYU Tandon School of Engineering

New York University

Room 802

370 Jay Street

New York, NY 11201, USA

Office phone: 646.997.0269

ac5455 at nyu dot edu

achoroma at gmail dot com

https://engineering.nyu.edu/faculty/anna-choromanska


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