Braid groups | Representation theory
In mathematics the Burau representation is a representation of the braid groups, named after and originally studied by the German mathematician Werner Burau during the 1930s. The Burau representation has two common and near-equivalent formulations, the reduced and unreduced Burau representations. (Wikipedia).
Agnès Gadbled: Categorical action of the braid group of the cylinder: symplectic aspect
The lecture was held within the framework of the Hausdorff Trimester Program: Symplectic Geometry and Representation Theory. Abstract: Khovanov and Seidel gave in 2000 an action of the classical braid group on a category of algebraic nature that categorifies the Burau representation. They
From playlist HIM Lectures: Trimester Program "Symplectic Geometry and Representation Theory"
Jack Morava: On the group completion of the Burau representation
Abstract: On fundamental groups, the discriminant ∏i≠k(zi – zk) ∈ C^× of a finite collection of points of the plane defines the abelianization homomorphism sending a braid to its number of overcrossings less undercrossings or writhe. In terms of diffeomorphisms of the punctured plane, it
From playlist SMRI Algebra and Geometry Online
Moduli of Representations and Pseudorepresentations - Carl Wang Erickson
Carl Wang Erickson Harvard University May 2, 2013 A continuous representation of a profinite group induces a continuous pseudorepresentation, where a pseudorepresentation is the data of the characteristic polynomial coefficients. We discuss the geometry of the resulting map from the moduli
From playlist Mathematics
Nonlinear algebra, Lecture 9: "Representation Theory", by Mateusz Michalek
This is the ninth lecture in the IMPRS Ringvorlesung, the advanced graduate course at the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences.
From playlist IMPRS Ringvorlesung - Introduction to Nonlinear Algebra
Representation Theory(Repn Th) 3 by Gerhard Hiss
DATE & TIME 05 November 2016 to 14 November 2016 VENUE Ramanujan Lecture Hall, ICTS Bangalore Computational techniques are of great help in dealing with substantial, otherwise intractable examples, possibly leading to further structural insights and the detection of patterns in many abstra
From playlist Group Theory and Computational Methods
DeepMind x UCL | Deep Learning Lectures | 10/12 | Unsupervised Representation Learning
Unsupervised learning is one of the three major branches of machine learning (along with supervised learning and reinforcement learning). It is also arguably the least developed branch. Its goal is to find a parsimonious description of the input data by uncovering and exploiting its hidden
From playlist Learning resources
Kevin Buzzard (lecture 17/20) Automorphic Forms And The Langlands Program [2017]
Full course playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLhsb6tmzSpiysoRR0bZozub-MM0k3mdFR http://wwwf.imperial.ac.uk/~buzzard/MSRI/ Summer Graduate School Automorphic Forms and the Langlands Program July 24, 2017 - August 04, 2017 Kevin Buzzard (Imperial College, London) https://w
From playlist MSRI Summer School: Automorphic Forms And The Langlands Program, by Kevin Buzzard [2017]
Representations of p-adic reductive groups by Tasho Kaletha
PROGRAM ZARISKI-DENSE SUBGROUPS AND NUMBER-THEORETIC TECHNIQUES IN LIE GROUPS AND GEOMETRY (ONLINE) ORGANIZERS: Gopal Prasad, Andrei Rapinchuk, B. Sury and Aleksy Tralle DATE: 30 July 2020 VENUE: Online Unfortunately, the program was cancelled due to the COVID-19 situation but it will
From playlist Zariski-dense Subgroups and Number-theoretic Techniques in Lie Groups and Geometry (Online)
Henniart: Classification des représentations admissibles irréductibles modulo p...
Recording during the thematicmeeting : "Algebraic and Finite Groups, Geometry and Representations. Celebrating 50 Years of the Chevalley Seminar " the September 23, 2014 at the Centre International de Rencontres Mathématiques (Marseille, France) Filmmaker: Guillaume Hennenfent Find this
From playlist Partial Differential Equations
Proper Actions and Representation Theory Part 3
Professor Toshiyuki Kobayashi, University of Tokyo, Japan
From playlist Distinguished Visitors Lecture Series