Topology Seminar: Chris Kapulkin - University of Western Ontario

-

Location: 258 Hurley Bldg

Photo of: Cris Kapulkin

Will give a Topology Seminar entitled:
Topology, graphs, and data

Abstract: Discrete homotopy theory is an emerging area of mathematics that applies topological intuitions in discrete settings. It associates (discrete) homotopy and homology groups to graphs that detect combinatorial, rather than topological, "holes." It has found numerous applications, including to matroid theory, hyperplane arrangements, and network analysis. This talk will be an introduction to discrete homotopy theory, building towards two main points. The first is a theoretical result, joint with Daniel Carranza (Compos. Math. 2024) that associates to a graph a topological space whose homotopy and homology groups recover the discrete homotopy and homology groups of the graph. The second, joint with Nathan Kershaw (arXiv:2506.15020) is an application of the foregoing result to data analysis, showing that persistent discrete homology provides an alternative to standard techniques of topological data analysis that is better suited for noisy data.

Date: 11-04-2025
Time: 2:15 pm
Location: 258 Hurley Bldg

Download Poster [PDF, 149k]