Speaker: Ming Zhong (Illinois Institute of Technology)
Self organization (aka collective behaviors) occurs naturally in crystal formation, cell aggregation, social behaviors, etc. It is challenging and intriguing to understand self organization from the mathematical point of view. We offer a statistical/machine learning approach to explain self organization from observation data; moreover, our learning approach can aid in validating and improving the modeling of self organization. We develop a learning framework to derive physically meaningful dynamical systems to understand self organization from observation. We then investigate the steady state properties of our learned estimators. We also extend the learning approach for dynamical models constrained on Riemannian manifolds. We further improve our learning capability to infer interaction variables as well as interaction kernels. We study the effectiveness of our learning method on the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory's modern Ephemerides. Upon careful inspection of our model, we discover that it even captures potion of the general relativity effects. A complete learning theory on second-order systems is presented, as well as two new models on emergence of social hierarchy and concurrent emergence of flocking and synchronization.
Time: February 10, 2023 2:30pm-3:30pm
Location: LeConte 440
Host: Siming He and Changhui Tan