Location






The seminar is held in hybrid format, in person (Múzeum krt. 4/i Room 224) and online by Zoom. Zoom Meeting link:


https://us02web.zoom.us/j/889933315?pwd=Q3U3V3VQdXpXckhJYWRrcWRiMUhhQT09



22 April (Friday) 4:15 PM  (Múzeum krt. 4/i) Room 224 + ONLINE
Judit Madarász
Rényi Institute of Mathematics, Budapest
 
Relativistic Computation
Two major new paradigms of computing arising from new physics are quantum computing and general relativistic computing. Quantum computing challenges complexity barriers in computability, while general relativistic computing challenges the physical Church-Turing thesis itself. In this talk, we concentrate on relativistic computers and on their challenge to the physical Church-Turing thesis (PhCT).

The talk is based on Chapter 9 written by  Hajnal Andréka, Judit X. Madarász, István Németi, Péter Németi, and Gergely Székely of book
Physical Perspectives on Computation, Computational Perspectives on Physics, edited by  Michael E. Cuffaro and Samuel C. Fletcher.



29 April (Friday) 4:15 PM  (Múzeum krt. 4/i)  Room 224 + ONLINE
Márton Gömöri (1)(2) and Miklós Rédei (3)
(1) Department of Logic, Institute of Philosophy Eötvös University Budapest
(2) Institute of Philosophy, Research Centre for the Humanities, Budapest
(3) Department of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method, LSE, London
 
Entropic taming of the Look Elsewhere Effect
To mitigate the Look Elsewhere Effect in multiple hypothesis testing using p -values, the paper suggests an “entropic correction” of the significance level at which the null hypothesis is rejected. The proposed correction uses the entropic uncertainty associated with the probability measure that expresses the prior-to-test probabilities expressing how likely the confirming evidence may occur at values of the parameter. When the prior-to-test probability is uniform (embodying maximal uncertainty) the entropic correction coincides with the Bonferroni correction. When the prior-to-test probability embodies maximal certainty (is concentrated on a single value of the parameter), the entropic correction overrides the Look Elsewhere Effect completely by not requiring any correction of significance. The intermediate situation is illustrated by a simple hypothetical example. Interpreting the prior-to-test probability subjectively allows a Bayesian spirit enter the frequentist multiple hypothesis testing in a disciplined manner. If the prior-to-test probability is determined objectively, the entropic correction makes possible to take into account in a technically explicit way the background theoretical knowledge relevant for the test.