Lunchbox Lecture Series

The PIMS Lunchbox Lecture series brings cutting edge research mathematics to a mixed academic and industrial audience. The events typically take place at the University of Calgary's downtown campus (in the heart of Calgary's business district) and features speakers from industry and academia talking about recent mathematical developments and providing a venue for networking.

To hear about upcoming PIMS Lunchbox Lectures and other associated news, please register for the Lunchbox Lecture Mailing list

Join for Lunchbox Lectures Mailing List

 

Previous Events

Industrial, Lunchbox Lecture
PIMS Lunchbox Lecture: Katarzyna Weron
September 17, 2024
University of Calgary - Downtown
Hysteresis, a phenomenon in which the response of a system lags behind and depends on its past history, has been used to understand various psychosocial phenomena, including abrupt shifts in opinion dynamics, political polarization, and more. The aim...
Industrial, Lunchbox Lecture
PIMS Lunchbox Lecture: Quan Long
October 20, 2022
University of Calgary - Downtown
Machine Learning including deep learning techniques have been successfully used in many big-data fields. However, a limitation of many machine learning tools is that one needs to have a very large sample size to train a model with many parameters...
Industrial, Lunchbox Lecture
PIMS Lunchbox Lecture: Dr. Ming-Jun Lai
March 7, 2019
University of Alberta
I shall first explain the concept of sparse solution of rectangular linear system. Algorithms such as L1 minimization and greedy strategy will be introduced for finding a sparse solution of underdetermined linear system. As an example, economic...
Industrial, Lunchbox Lecture
PIMS Lunchbox Lecture: Dr. Hua Shen
December 6, 2018
University of Alberta
In many fields such as medicine, engineering, economics and psychology, we often encounter a pooled population and its observations while the subpopulation identification is of interest but unobserved. For example, primary care physicians want to...
Industrial, Lunchbox Lecture
PIMS Lunchbox Lecture: Dr. Yau Shu Wong
November 8, 2018
University of Alberta
With advanced in computer and sensor technologies, large-scale data sets are now routinely generated and recorded from a wide range of sources in business, sciences, engineering, health care and medical research, etc. Although data-driven method...
Industrial, Lunchbox Lecture
PIMS Lunchbox Lecture: Jöern Davidsen
May 24, 2018
University of Alberta
Physical, geophysical, chemical, living and man-made systems often show behaviors that cannot be understood by studying their building blocks or constituents to ever finer detail but that are emergent. The concept of emergence can be summarized by...
Industrial, Lunchbox Lecture
PIMS Lunchbox Lecture: Artem Korobenko
April 5, 2018
Calgary, Alberta
A flexible Fluid-Structure Interaction (FSI) framework is presented. The framework is derived on the basis of an Augmented Lagrangian formulation for FSI, and is suitable for matching and non-matching interface discretization. The key constituents of...
Industrial, Lunchbox Lecture
PIMS Lunchbox Lecture: Dr. Tim Huh
October 12, 2017
University of Calgary
Data analytics is increasingly becoming an important part of decision making process in applications ranging from management, technology, policy analysis and sports. Key decisions that have been traditionally made by humans are now partly made or at...
Industrial, Lunchbox Lecture
PIMS Vancouver Lunchbox Lecture: Dave Fracchia
March 10, 2017
Simon Fraser University
Mathematics is integral to every aspect of game development including character and level creation, movement, player input, NPC behaviour, physics simulations, and real-time rendering. Fortunately for game designers, most of this computation is...
Industrial, Lunchbox Lecture
PIMS Lunchbox Lecture: Dr. Mariel Lavieri
February 23, 2017
University of Alberta
Chronic disease management often involves sequential decisions that have long-term implications. Those decisions are based on high dimensional information, which pose a problem for traditional modeling paradigms. In some key instances, the disease...