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Mathematical Reasoning, Formal Proof Systems and Mathematical Reasoning
Siddhartha GadgilICTS:28950 -
Women in the India's workforce: Sticky floors, glass ceilings and leaky pipelines
Rosa AbrahamICTS:28949 -
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General Talk : How do shampoos, lotions and clays flow when pushed?
Ranjini BandyopadhyayICTS:28852 -
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Regularities within irregularities
Nikita AgarwalICTS:28962Nature has been a great inspiration for many scientific developments. Fractal Geometry is a case in point. Fractals are mathematical objects resembling the irregularities that are observed in nature. Fractal geometry aims to understand the regularities that are hidden behind such irregularities. In this talk, we will discuss the key mathematical concepts related to Fractal Geometry using illustrative examples. We will also give an overview of the development of this field and their applications.
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Social Cognition: a peek through a multimodal lens
K M SharikaICTS:28958According to the social brain hypothesis, primate brains evolved in size to adapt to the increasing demands of navigating a complex social network. Recent evidence has corroborated this by demonstrating how social interactions (or its lack of) can have measurable consequences on an organism’s biological fitness. However, the physiological mechanisms underlying our everyday decisions in a social context are not yet well-understood. In this talk, I will share some key findings from social neuroscience, highlighting some of our own work with non-human primates on valence based social decision-making. I will end with talking about another aspect of group behavior, a phenomenon known as ‘physiological synchrony’ and show, using our own data from a naturalistic group discussion task, how it could be a biomarker of effective group decision-making.
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Navigating Uncertainty with the Power of Data: Probability and Statistics Unraveling Real-World Challenges
Sayantee JanaICTS:28957Dive into the fascinating world of probability, statistics and data mining as we embark on a journey to unravel complex real-world challenges. Through captivating examples, stories and anecdotes, discover how these statistical principles enable us to quantify the unknown, navigate uncertainty, and devise effective strategies for addressing a wide range of real-world problems. We also discuss about the journey of statistics through time.
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Mathematical Games
Jyothi KrishnanICTS:28953In this session we will play games and develop the mathematics of some games (and maybe a puzzle or two).
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Mathematical Reasoning, Formal Proof Systems and Mathematical Reasoning
Siddhartha GadgilICTS:28950Generative AI has become a popular sensation, showing remarkable abilities including with language, analogical reasoning and originality. But, as is well known, it is notoriously unreliable.
Less visible have been dramatic developments in Formal Proof Systems, where computers verify and help in finding proofs.
Formal proof systems perfectly complement generative AI for Mathematical reasoning, at least in principle. In this talk, I discuss these two developments and their relation.
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Women in the India's workforce: Sticky floors, glass ceilings and leaky pipelines
Rosa AbrahamICTS:28949Indian women work ten times more than their counterparts in other countries. Yet, as per official statistics, only 1 out every 4 working age women in India are employed. There have been several arguments made to answer this question. One strand of the literature points towards the conceptualisation of the notion of employment and its limitations in identifying and recognising the kinds of work that women do. Relatedly, some argue that ways of data collection inherently fails to capture women's employment - 'data is sexist!', as they say. A second strand argues that women's domestic work, care burden and gender-based norms keep women out of the paid workforce. Finally, a more recent strand points towards the lack of job creation as a fundamental reason for fewer women in the workforce. Based on primary surveys and official secondary data, the talk addresses each of these strands to unpack the low and falling levels of women's employment in India. I draw from my personal experiences as a...
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Music Applications of Fourier Analysis
Preeti RaoICTS:28944Fourier decomposition into component frequencies helps to describe audio signals in terms of musical attributes such as melody and timbre. We link the components to the perception of the sound and show the utility of the analysis in applications such as music search and source separation.
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Public Engagement and the History of Science
Jahnavi PhalkeyICTS:28943Seen to be at the vanguard of the STEM to STEAM movement, Science Gallery is the world’s first university-linked network dedicated to public engagement with science and art with galleries in Atlanta, Dublin, London, Melbourne, and Monterrary. Science Gallery Bengaluru is the first such gallery of the network in Asia with the mandate to deliver a global mission. In this talk, Jahnavi Phalkey will introduce the form and structure of the new institution, and explore with us the ideas that inform the shape of Science Gallery Bengaluru through her journey to answer one question: what does it mean to go beyond science communication towards an engagement with science, and what does history of science have to do with it?
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What is Symplectic geometry?
Ipsita DattaICTS:28929This will be a gentle introduction to phase spaces and symplectic geometry. I hope to give a sense of what sort of questions are interesting to people working in this field.
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General Talk : How do shampoos, lotions and clays flow when pushed?
Ranjini BandyopadhyayICTS:28852 -