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Stochastic Diffusions for Control, Inference, and Learning

Program in Applied Mathematics Colloquium

Stochastic Diffusions for Control, Inference, and Learning
Series: Program in Applied Mathematics Colloquium
Location: MATH 501
Presenter: Yongxin Chen, Department of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Tech

Diffusion processes refer to a class of stochastic processes driven by Brownian motion. They have been widely used in various applications, ranging from engineering to science to finance. In this talk, I will discuss my experiences with diffusion and how this powerful tool has shaped our research programs. I will go over several research projects in the area of control, inference, and machine learning, where we have extensively utilized tools from diffusion processes. In particular, I will present our research on three topics: i) covariance control in which we aim to regulate the uncertainties of a dynamic system; ii) Monte Carlo Markov chain sampling for general inference tasks; iii) and diffusion models for generative modeling in machine learning.

Yongxin Chen is an Associate Professor in the School of Aerospace Engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology. He has served on the faculty at Iowa State University (2017-2018). Prior to that, he spent one year (2016-2017) at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) as a postdoctoral fellow. He received his BSc from Shanghai Jiao Tong University in 2011, and Ph.D. from University of Minnesota in 2016, both in Mechanical Engineering. He is an awardee of the George S. Axelby Best Paper Award of IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control in 2017 and the best paper prize of SIAM Journal on Control and Optimization in 2023. He received the NSF Faculty Early Career Development Program (CAREER) Award in 2020, the Simons-Berkeley Research Fellowship in 2021, the A. V. `Bal’ Balakrishnan Award in 2021, and the Donald P. Eckman Award for outstanding young engineer in the field of automatic control in 2022. His current research interests are in the areas of control theory, machine learning, and robotics. He enjoys developing new algorithms and theoretical frameworks for real world applications.

 

Place: Math Building, Room 501  https://map.arizona.edu/89