Submitted by mjarvisa on February 11, 2011 - 15:23
Lecturer :
André Schumacher
Event type:
HIIT seminar
Event time:
2011-02-18 10:15 to 11:00
Place:
Kumpula Exactum C222
Description:
Talk announcement: HIIT Seminar Kumpula, Friday Feb 18 10:15, Exactum C222 SPEAKER: André Schumacher Aalto University TITLE: Primal-dual algorithms for distributed optimization ABSTRACT: Recently, it was discovered that some protocols for computer networks can be seen as algorithms that implicitly solve an optimization problem, which characterizes optimal states of the distributed system. Many of these protocols can be modeled as algorithms that simultaneously solve a pair of primal and dual problems. The underlying "locality by duality" principle was already exploited to design distributed algorithms for various optimization problems. In this talk I will highlight the algorithmic ideas that form the basis for distributed primal-dual algorithms. I will then give an example in the form of an algorithm for the minimum-weight dominating-set problem that was proposed as part of an algorithmic scheme for lifetime maximization in wireless sensor networks. This second part of the talk is based on joint research carried out at the Department of Information and Computer Science of Aalto University School of Science. BIO: André Schumacher received his doctoral degree from Aalto University School of Science and Technology in 2010 and is currently a researcher with the Distributed Computation group at the Department of Information and Computer Science of Aalto University. His research interests include distributed algorithms, approximation and online algorithms, network optimization, as well as adhoc and sensor networks. Welcome! --Matti Järvisalo HIIT SEMINAR TENTATIVE SCHEDULE Spring 2011 ------------------------------------------- Feb 18: André Schumacher Feb 25: Jose A. Fernandes Mar 4: Petteri Kaski Mar 11: Esther Galbrun Mar 18: Valentin Polishchuk Mar 25: Esa Junttila Apr 1: *** free *** Apr 8: *** free *** Apr 15: *** free ***
Last updated on 11 Feb 2011 by Matti Järvisalo - Page created on 11 Feb 2011 by Matti Järvisalo