Activities This Week
AGNT
TBA
May 4, 16:00—17:15, 2022, -101
Speaker
No meeting
BGU Probability and Ergodic Theory (PET) seminar
Yom Ha’Atzmaut
May 5, 11:10—12:00, 2022, -101
Speaker
Holiday
Colloquium
Can you hear the shape of a low-degree Boolean function?
May 10, 14:30—15:30, 2022, Math -101
Speaker
Nathan Keller (BIU)
Abstract
Analysis of Boolean functions aims at “hearing the shape” of functions on the discrete cube {-1,1}^n – namely, at understanding what the structure of the (discrete) Fourier transform tells us about the function. In this talk, we focus on the structure of “low-degree” functions on the discrete cube, namely, on functions whose Fourier coefficients are concentrated on “low” frequencies. While such functions look very simple, we are surprisingly far from understanding them well, even in the most basic first-degree case. We shall present several results on first-degree functions on the discrete cube, including the recent proof of Tomaszewski’s conjecture (1986) which asserts that any first-degree function (viewed as a random variable) lies within one standard deviation from its mean with probability at least 1/2. Then we shall discuss several core open questions, which boil down to understanding, what does the knowledge that a low-degree function is bounded, or is two-valued, tell us about its structure.
Based on joint work with Ohad Klein