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Gil Kalai from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem will present the Algorithms, Combinatorics and Optimization (ACO) Distinguished Lecture on September 13, 2012 at 4:30 pm in Weber Space Science and Technology Building II (Weber SST II) Room 2.
There will be a reception in the lobby of Weber SST II at 4 p.m.
Gil Kalai, is the Henry and Manya Noskwith Professor of Mathematics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He has a long term visiting position at Yale University and he is a frequent visitor to Microsoft Research.
Kalai's main research areas are combinatorics and convexity. He is interested in the combinatorial theory of convex polytopes, relations of combinatorics with topology and with Fourier analysis, Boolean functions, and threshold and isoperimetric phenomena. His interests also include applications to and connection with theoretical computer science, mathematical programming, probability theory, quantum computing, and game theory.
Kalai is the recipient of the 1992 Polya Prize, the 1993 Erdös Prize, the 1994 Fulkerson Prize and the 2012 Rothschild Prize. He is a member of the Center for the Study of Rationality as well as the Center for Quantum Information Science at the Hebrew University. He has served in several scientific committees at the university as well as at the national and international levels and he belongs to several editorial boards. In the last years he has been writing a scientific blog, Combinatorics and More, and has been active in various Internet mathematical activities.
A few results and two general conjectures regarding analysis of Boolean functions, influence, and threshold phenomena will be presented.
Influence of variables on Boolean functions is connected to their Fourier analysis and threshold behavior as well as to discrete isoperimetry and noise sensitivity.
The first conjecture to be described (with Friedgut) is called the Entropy-Influence Conjecture (it was featured on Tao's blog). It gives a far reaching extension to the KKL theorem, and theorems by Friedgut, Bourgain, and me.
The second conjecture (with Kahn) proposes a far-reaching generalization to results by Friedgut, Bourgain and Hatami.
References