21-22 October 2005
McConomy Auditorium - University Center
Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA
Online
Registration Form
Description:
Frieze Fest 2005 is a workshop to honor and celebrate the
career of Alan Frieze on the occasion of his 60th birthday.
Professor Frieze played a central and leading role in the rapid
development of the fields of randomized algorithms, random
structures and combinatorics over the last three decades. This role
has been recognized with a Fulkerson Prize, a Guggenheim Fellowship,
and editorship in numerous leading journals in these areas. Given the
central role professor Frieze has played, we expect this workshop to
be a tremendous opportunity for interaction and dissemination across
the fields of Discrete Mathematics, Operations Research and
Theoretical Computer Science.
Banquet:
On the evening of Friday, 21 October 2005, there will be a
workshop banquet featuring reminiscences about the life
and career of Alan Frieze (both respectful and otherwise).
This banquet will be held at the elegant Pittsburgh Golf
Club in Schenley Park. Light appetizers and a full
sit-down dinner are included in the banquet fee; a cash
bar will be available. The
organizers strongly encourage all workshop participants
to attend the banquet since it promises to be an enjoyable
evening with good food and an entertaining social program.
(Dress is business casual; please no
t-shirts, jeans, shorts, or sneakers.)
Registration and Payment Information: Late Registration Deadline Monday, October 17th
Registration is required.
Anyone planning to attend the workshop and/or banquet
(including CMU faculty and students) should register online.
Workshop:The fee to attend the
workshop sessions is US$50; this fee will be waived for
attendees who register by Friday, October 7th, 2005.
Your registration fee includes admission to all workshop
sessions, continental breakfast, lunch, and morning and
afternoon coffee breaks.
Banquet: The additional fee to
attend the banquet is US$30 for faculty and US$15 for
students. This fee includes light appetizers and a full
sit-down dinner; a cash bar will be available.
Online
Registration Form
Hotel Accommodations
Out-of-town visitors should make
hotel reservations immediately since availability is
severely limited due to the University of Pittsburgh's
homecoming.
The Wyndham Garden Hotel (3454 Forbes Avenue, Pittsburgh,
PA 15213) has agreed to extend the pre-negotiated rate of
$145 per night ($165.30 including taxes) to workshop
attendees as long as rooms are available. Parking is
available in the hotel garage for an additional $12 per
night ($13.68 including taxes). To make your
reservations, you should call the Wyndham directly at
412-683-2040 and be sure to ask for the FriezeFest
meeting rate.
Graduate Student and Postdoc Funding
Travel funding is available for a limited number of
graduate students and/or postdocs who will be attending
the workshop. This funding is restricted to US citizens
and permanent residents. To apply, send a description of
your research interests and one brief letter of support
(preferably from an academic advisor) to Tom Bohman at
tbohman@math.cmu.edu. Applications for this funding must
be received by Friday, September 30, 2005. Travel awards
will be in the form of room (3 nights stay in a shared
hotel room) and up to $300 for airfare.
Getting Around Pittsburgh
Ground transportation between the airport and the
Wyndham Garden Hotel or Carnegie Mellon
(pdf)
Directions and map from the Wyndham Garden Hotel to
Carnegie Mellon University and the Pittsburgh Golf Club
(pdf)
Carnegie Mellon Campus Map (offsite link)
Yahoo! map and driving directions from Carnegie Mellon
University to the Omni William Penn Hotel (pdf)
Agenda
Read the Abstracts
See the Poster (pdf
8.1MB), (gif 183KB) |
Friday, 21 October 2005
Saturday, 22 October 2005 |
8:30 am |
Continental Breakfast |
9:00 am |
Noga Alon,
Tel Aviv University
The Frieze-Kannan Decomposition method and
Grothendieck type inequalities (abstract)
|
10:00 am |
Break |
10:30 am |
Jeff Kahn,
Rutgers University
Some correlation inequalities (abstract)
|
11:05 am |
Mike Steele,
University of Pennsylvania
Minimum Spanning Trees and the Zeta Theorems (abstract)
|
11:40 am |
Boris Pittel,
Ohio State University
Bootstrap percolation on the random regular graph
(abstract)
|
12:15 pm |
Lunch |
2:00 pm |
Ravi Kannan,
Yale University
Low-Rank Approximations to Matrices and Tensors (abstract)
|
3:00 pm |
Break |
3:30 pm |
Colin Cooper,
King's College London
The cover time of random walks on random graphs (abstract)
|
4:05 pm |
Aravind Srinivasan,
University of Maryland
The Local Lemma for random variables with large support (abstract)
|
4:40 pm |
Eric Vigoda,
Georgia Institute of Technology
Simulated Annealing for the Permanent and Binary Contingency Tables (abstract)
|
5:15 pm |
Free time / Travel to Banquet |
6:30 pm |
Banquet Cocktail hour begins at 6:30pm, with dinner beginning at 7:30pm. |
|
Saturday, 22 October 2005 Friday, 21 October 2005 |
8:30 am |
Continental Breakfast |
9:00 am |
Eli Upfal,
Brown University
The Combinatorics of Sequencing by Hybridization (abstract)
|
10:00 am |
Break |
10:30 am |
Dimitris Achlioptas,
Microsoft Research
Clustering of solutions in random constraint
satisfaction problems
(abstract)
|
11:05 am |
Andrei Broder,
Yahoo! Research
Sampling Search Engine Results (abstract)
|
11:40 am |
Richard M. Karp,
University of California at Berkeley
Geometric Optics, Linear Programming and Congestion in Sensornets
(abstract)
|
12:15 pm |
Lunch |
1:30 pm |
FOCS 2005 Tutorials
Separate registration is required for FOCS at http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~FOCS05/
|
4:00 pm |
Martin Dyer,
University of Leeds
Generating random colourings (abstract)
|
5:00 pm |
Nick Wormald,
University of Waterloo
On the chromatic number of random regular graphs (abstract)
|
5:30 pm - 6:00 pm |
Jeong Han Kim,
Microsoft Research
Poisson Cloning Model and Giant Component of Random Graphs (abstract)
|
|