UBC Mathematics of Information Colloquium: Sinho Chewi
Topic
Towards a theory of complexity of sampling, inspired by optimization
Speakers
Details
Sampling is a fundamental and widespread algorithmic primitive that lies at the heart of Bayesian inference and scientific computing, among other disciplines. Recent years have seen a flood of works aimed at laying down the theoretical underpinnings of sampling, in analogy to the fruitful and widely used theory of convex optimization. In this talk, I will discuss some of my work in this area, focusing on new convergence guarantees obtained via a proximal algorithm for sampling, as well as a new framework for studying the complexity of non-log-concave sampling.
Additional Information
A reception will be held before the Colloquium: Tea/coffee and light snacks.
Date/time: Friday, February 3rd, 2:15pm
Location: PIMS lounge ESB 4133