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Past Events

06/06/2022 - 06/10/2022
Erdős Center
Discrete structures and their limits: an active area of research that connects discrete mathematics with ergodic theory, stochastic processes, spectral theory, measured group theory and various branches of analysis and topology.
05/30/2022 - 06/03/2022
Erdős Center
This summer school aims to bring together mathematicians and network scientists to foster the exchange of ideas between these two fields. During the school several minicourses will be given by distinguished researchers in graph theory and network science for students from both fields, who are interested in multidisciplinary approaches to networks.
05/23/2022 - 05/25/2022
Erdős Center
The aim of this focused workshop is to bring together some of the experts that work on dynamic percolation models of self-organized criticality. The time evolution of these random graphs are shaped by two competing mechanisms of opposite effect: addition of edges and deletion of large connected components.
05/16/2022 - 05/20/2022
Erdős Center
The workshop focuses on discrete structures and their limits. This is an active area of research that connects discrete mathematics with ergodic theory, stochastic processes, spectral theory, measured group theory and various branches of analysis and topology.
05/09/2022 - 05/13/2022
Erdős Center
May 9-13, 2022. The idea of the Mathematics of Large Networks Workshop is to bring together mathematicians and network scientists with the aim of fostering the exchange of ideas.
04/25/2022 - 04/27/2022
Erdős Center
The workshop will be centered about structural limits and should consist mainly from disscussions after some introductry talks.
03/21/2022 - 03/25/2022
Erdős Center
The subject of the workshop will be centered around the following question: Suppose G is a fundamental group of a Riemannian manifold M. How can we use the geometry of M to study the flexible stability of G?
03/07/2022 - 03/18/2022
Erdős Center
The purpose of this workshop is to bring together experts and young scientists, who develop or use tools offered by the theory of combinatorial limits, to exchange ideas related to the dense and sparse settings with hopes of designing new methods for problems both inside and outside combinatorics.