Date: Thursday 27 April 2023
This talk is part of the series of activities presented by Prof. Mike Giles at UNSW.
- 2:00pm – 3:00pm: Talk
- 3:00pm: Reception
The Nexus lectures have been established by the School to promote outstanding research in fundamental mathematics and to further future collaborations across different mathematical fields. These lectures are held every few months and are open to anyone in the UNSW community, as well as the general public.
Multilevel function approximation—ideas and meta-theorems
Abstract
Building on prior research by others on classical and sparse grid interpolation and Multilevel Monte Carlo methods, this seminar will present new ideas on the approximation of parametric functions of the form $f(\theta)$ where $\theta$ is multi-dimensional and each function evaluation corresponds to either a functional of the solution of a PDE, with parametric dependence on $\theta$, or the expected value of a functional of the solution of an SDE, again with a parametric dependence on $\theta$. In both cases, exact sampling ofÌý$f(\theta)$ is not possible, and greater accuracy comes at a higher computational cost.
The key idea to improve the computational cost for a given accuracy is a multilevel representation of the function $f(\theta)$ with coarse levels using very accurate approximations of $f(\theta)$ at a very limited number of points, whereas fine levels use inaccurateÌýapproximationsÌýat a large number of points.
The seminar will present the underpinning literature, and the central idea, together with meta-theorems which determine the computational complexity if certain assumptions are satisfied.Ìý On-going research is aimed at the numerical analysis required to determine whether those assumptions are indeed satisfied, as well as computational work to demonstrate the benefits for both PDEs and SDEs, and verify the predicted complexity.
About the speaker:
Mike Giles is a Professor of Scientific Computing in the Mathematical Institute of Oxford University.Ìý After 25 years developing and analysing methods for Computational Fluid Dynamics, in collaboration with Rolls-Royce, he has spent the past 15 years developing and analysing Multilevel Monte Carlo methods for a range of applications.Ìý He also has extensive research interests in high performance computing, particularly on GPUs.Ìý He became a Fellow of SIAM in 2018, and was head of department in 2018-2022.
Prof. Mike Giles is visiting the School of Mathematics and Statistics until 12thÌýof May 2023.
Further information is available fromÌý.
Ìý
Mike Giles
Nexus Colloquium & Computational Math Seminar
University of Oxford
Thursday 27 April
2pm: Lecture (RC-4082)
3pm: Afternoon tea reception to follow (in RC-3082)
RC-4082 (Red Centre Building, Centre Wing, UNSW Sydney)
Please register for the reception using the link below.