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<b> Journal Club </b>
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The homology of Data <br>
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Nina Otter (UCLA)
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14.04. - 17.04.2020 <br>
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Physikalisches Institut, INF 226
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[[Topics in Topological and Geometric Methods in Data Analysis]]
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part of the [https://gsfp.physi.uni-heidelberg.de/graddays/| Heidelberg Physics Graduate Days]
  
Michael Bleher, Daniel Spitz
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<b>Abstract</b>
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Techniques and ideas from topology - the mathematical area that studies shapes - are being applied to the study of data with increasing frequency and success.
  
<i>During the winter term we organize a weekly Journal Club meeting to discuss diverse topics in topological data analysis. We will take a detailed look at foundational articles, specific applications and recent developments in the field. </i>
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In this lecture series we will explore how we can use homology, a technique in topology that gives a measure of the number of holes of a space, to study data. The most well-known method of this type is persistent homology, in which one associates a one-parameter family of spaces to a data set and studies how the holes evolve across the parameter space. A more recent and less well-known technique is magnitude homology, which one can think of as giving a measure of the "effective number of points" of a metric space. In this course we will introduce the theoretical background for persistent and magnitude homology, and then dive into applications using software implementations and statistical analysis tools on real-world data sets.
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Revision as of 16:58, 2 March 2020

The homology of Data
Nina Otter (UCLA)

14.04. - 17.04.2020
Physikalisches Institut, INF 226

part of the Heidelberg Physics Graduate Days

Abstract Techniques and ideas from topology - the mathematical area that studies shapes - are being applied to the study of data with increasing frequency and success.

In this lecture series we will explore how we can use homology, a technique in topology that gives a measure of the number of holes of a space, to study data. The most well-known method of this type is persistent homology, in which one associates a one-parameter family of spaces to a data set and studies how the holes evolve across the parameter space. A more recent and less well-known technique is magnitude homology, which one can think of as giving a measure of the "effective number of points" of a metric space. In this course we will introduce the theoretical background for persistent and magnitude homology, and then dive into applications using software implementations and statistical analysis tools on real-world data sets.