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Efficient Branching Rules for Optimizing Range and Order-Based Objective Functions

1163 Mechanical Engineering 1513 Engineering Dr., Madison, WI, United States

  We consider range minimization problems featuring exponentially many variables, as frequently arising in fairness-oriented or bi-objective optimization. While branch and price is successful at solving cost-oriented problems with many variables, the performance of classical branch-and-price algorithms for range minimization is drastically impaired by weak linear programming relaxations. We propose range branching, a generic branching...

Free

Mechanics Seminar Series: Professor Marcia Cooper

3M Auditorium, rm 1106 Mechanical Engineering Building 1513 University Ave, Madison

The Mechanics Seminar Series is a weekly seminar given by campus and visiting speakers on topics across the spectrum of mechanics research (solids, fluids, and dynamics). Professor Marcia Cooper is...

BME Seminar Series: Molly Bright, D.Phil.

1003 (Tong Auditorium) Engineering Centers Building 1550 Engineering Drive, Madison, WI, United States

Translational neurovascular fMRI throughout the central nervous system Molly Bright, D.Phil.Assistant ProfessorBiomedical EngineeringPhysical Therapy and Human Movement SciencesNorthwestern University Abstract:Functional MRI offers unique promise for non-invasively mapping activity throughout the central nervous system, yet numerous challenges have kept it from clinical translation. Our lab seeks to address these challenges, using fMRI to characterize individual neuropathophysiology...

CBE Seminar Series: David W. Flaherty

1610 Engineering Hall 1415 Engineering Drive, Madison, WI, United States

David W. FlahertySchool of Chemical and Biomolecular EngineeringGeorgia Institute of TechnologyAtlanta, GA Charting New Waters: Catalytic Active Sites in Dynamic Environments Catalytic reactions on solid materials form the foundations of chemical manufacturing, yet many phenomena that impact catalysis within microporous zeolites and on metal nanoparticles challenge current understanding. As society transitions toward more sustainable methods...

Grad School Virtual Info Session

Join us to learn more about graduate school with the Department of Mechanical Engineering! We will be hosting two virtual sessions on October 3 and October 24th from 9:00-12:00pm CST....

GRAINGER Red Talk

Wendt Commons 215 North Randall Avenue, Madison, Wisconsin

332 Wendt Commons Join the team from Grainger to learn about how Advanced Analytics Methods and Machine Learning are being employed at Grainger! All majors are welcome. Ian's pizza will be provided. Connect on social and view open roles at Grainger: List of Links (me-qr.com) Questions about Grainger? Email: campustalent@grainger.com

ME 903 Graduate Seminar: Kurt Schneider

3M Auditorium, rm 1106 Mechanical Engineering Building 1513 University Ave, Madison

The ME 903: Graduate Student Lecture Series features campus and visiting speakers who present on a variety of research topics in the field of mechanical engineering. Kurt Schneider is an Engineering Group Manager at General Motors.

Exact Label Recovery in Euclidean Random Graphs

1163 Mechanical Engineering 1513 Engineering Dr., Madison, WI, United States

In this paper, we propose a family of label recovery problems on weighted Euclidean random graphs. The vertices of a graph are embedded in R^d according to a Poisson point process and are assigned to a discrete community label. Our goal is to infer the vertex labels, given edge weights whose distributions depend on the...

Free

Mechanics Seminar Series: Dr. Michael Wadas

3M Auditorium, rm 1106 Mechanical Engineering Building 1513 University Ave, Madison

The Mechanics Seminar Series is a weekly seminar given by campus and visiting speakers on topics across the spectrum of mechanics research (solids, fluids, and dynamics). Dr. Michael Wadas is a postdoctoral scholar at the Caltech.

BME Seminar Series: Nico Stuurman, PhD

1003 (Tong Auditorium) Engineering Centers Building 1550 Engineering Drive, Madison, WI, United States

Software control of microscopes, where do we go? Nico Stuurman, PhDDirector of the Center for Advanced Light MicroscopyResearch Professor in Biochemistry and BiophysicsUniversity of California, San Francisco Abstract:Modern light microscopes consist of digital cameras and many motorized parts that need to be computer controlled for efficient operation. Software has therefore become an integral part of...