Fall 2004, Spring 2005, and Summer 2005 Colloquium Schedule, Dept. of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Maine
This page lists only those talks from Fall 2004 through Summer 2005. The current colloquium schedule, as well as links to other past semesters, is available here.
Fall 2004
Wednesday, Aug 25, 2004
9:00am, 421 Neville
Suzhong Tian, Dept. of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Maine
Statistical Inference for the Risk Ratio in 2 X 2 Binomial Trials with Structural Zero
Wednesday, Nov 3, 2004
2:30pm, 100 Neville Hall
Dr. Ram C. Tripathi, Dept. of Management Science and Statistics, University of Texas at San Antonio
Weighted Least-squares and Mximum Likelihood Estimation for Longitudinal Data with Truncated Observations: An Application in Pharmacokinetic Studies of Environmental Contaminants
Thursday, Nov 4, 2004
2:30pm, 100 Neville Hall
Dr. Arthur Benjamin, Dept. of Mathematics, Harvey Mudd College
Proofs That Really Count
Thursday, Nov 4, 2004
7:00pm, 100 Donald P. Corbett Hall
Dr. Arthur Benjamin, Dept. of Mathematics, Harvey Mudd College
What do you get when you cross a mathematician with a magician? Mathemagician!
Thursday, Nov 11, 2004
3:10pm, 100 Neville Hall
Dan Look, Dept. of Mathematics, Boston University
An Escape Trichotomy for Singularly Perturbed Complex Polynomials
Thursday, Dec 9, 2004
2:00pm, 421 Neville Hall
Katherine Merrill, Dept. of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Maine
Ramanujan's Entry 20
Spring and Summer 2005
Wednesday, Feb 2, 2005
3:00pm, 421 NV
Amanda Criner, Dept. of Mathematics and Statistics, University of MaineInternet Epidemiology
Monday, Feb 7, 2005
3:00pm, 105 DPC
Dr. Richard Jordan, Dynamics Technology, Inc.
Mathematical Modeling and Analysis of Spatial Epidemics
Thursday, Feb 10, 2005
1:10pm, 131 Barrows
Katherine Merrill, Dept. of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Maine
Ramanujan's Formula for the Riemann Zeta Function Extended to L-Functions
Thursday, Feb 10, 2005
3:00pm, 105 DPC
Dr. Anita Layton, Mathematics Dept., Duke University
Mathematical Modeling of Renal Physiology
Thursday, Feb 24, 2005
2:10pm, 421 Neville
Prof. Fernando Gouvea, Dept. of Mathematics, Colby College
On p-adic numbers and their history
Thursday, March 17, 2005
3:00pm, 105 DPC
Dr. Neil Portnoy, Stony Brook University (SUNY)
How do preservice teachers' understandings of function develop while engaging in a curriculum module in knot theory?
Thursday, March 24, 2005
11:00am, 421 Neville Hall
Hui Tao, Dept. of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Maine
An Investigation of False Discovery Rates in Multiple Testing Under Dependence
Monday, March 28, 2005
3:00pm, 105 DPC
Dr. Andre Khalil, Jackson Laboratory
Wavelets and Fractals: From Astrophysics to Bio-Medical Image Analysis
Thursday, March 31, 2005
3:00pm, 421 Neville
Dr. Charles Li, Dept of Mathematics, UCLA
A new proof of the Petersson Trace Formula
11:00am, 421 Neville Hall
Hui Tao, Dept. of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Maine
An Investigation of False Discovery Rates in Multiple Testing Under Dependence
Monday, April 17, 2005
3:10pm, 107 DPC
Richard Haynes, Dept. of Mathematics, University of Chicago
From the Exotic to the Mundane in Topology
Friday, April 22, 2005
3:10pm, 202 Shibles
Nancy Austin, University of Southern Maine
The Implications of Middle School Teacher Research Data for Teacher Certification
Thursday, May 12, 2005
2:00pm, 210 Neville
Hui Tao, Dept. of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Maine
An Investigation of False Discovery Rates in Multiple Testing Under Dependence
Friday, July 15, 2005
2:00pm, 419 Neville
Brooke Feigon, Dept of Mathematics, UCLA
From Classical Automorphic Forms to Base Change and a Relative Trace Formula in the Local Field Setting