13:55 opening
14:00 - 14:30 C Andrieu, Bristol
14:35 - 15:05 A Wang, Warwick
15:10 - 15:40 C-H Rhee, Northwestern
15:40 - 15:55 Break
15:55 - 16:25 J Yang, Copenhagen
16:30 - 17:00 D Avitabile, Amsterdam
17:00 - 17:30 F Milinanni, ICERM/Brown University
Posts by Pierre Nyquist
Last minute but the Cramér society's online conference for Federica Milinanni's award for best thesis 2025 is happening today @ 13:55 Stockholm time. Zoom link: lu-se.zoom.us/j/6241307147...
Schedule below:
Hej Göteborg!
Snart är det dags för en ny upplaga av "Forskaren i framtidens offentlighet".
När? 15 april, 9.15-15.30
Var? Chalmers
Är det gratis? Yes, men man måste föranmäla sig och platserna är begränsade.
Länk till anmälan: docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1F...
@bjornlundberg.bsky.social
Happy birthday to Emmy Noether. Talking about her today in classes.
Here are some drawing about her by coni777.bsky.social crojasmolina.com/illustration...
At a new gin bar in Gothenburg and they are serving sloe gin AND playing Outkast so I guess this is my new spot? 🤷♂️
It's terrible but can't lie, I laughed. With this + the Donald Glover as Yoshi "story", The Onion is on one today.
generation of Swedes that can step into the shoes of the old one". Friends, the regular visitors to the Leadbetter home were (primarily) Cramér and later on Kallenberg. Luckily this was before I knew who they were, otherwise imposter syndrome would have kicked into overdrive that very first night.
the Leadbetters and when it was time to settle in day 1 Ross walked us downstairs and to a room where there was a Swedish flag. I guess he saw my confusion and proceeded to say something along the lines "Oh this is the room where my Swedish visitors used to stay. It is so nice to now have a new
Story time: Regardless of my own research area, and frankly nationality, I have a great affinity for Cramér dating back to my first visit to the US. I was coming as an undergrad to Chapel Hill to visit Ross Leadbetter and Amarjit Budhiraja for six months. First couple of days we were staying with
Correction: 3 years, as it clearly says in the book. I blame the local people that said two years during lunch today. Also, Itô especially mentions the joy of spending time with Cramér while here and for some reason this made me happy.
Back in Århus and TIL that Itô spent about 2 years here in the 60s, between his time at Stanford and Cornell. Somehow I had completely missed this. There is even a Springer book covering lectures he gave here:
Finally getting back to making a paper we "finished" before Christmas submissions-ready. Me this morning: This will only take a day or two. Me 7h later: ok so the notations section is almost done...
💡 Sök eller nominera till Forskningsfyren!
JULIA RAVANIS mottog utmärkelsen 2025:
”För mig kändes det som ett bevis på att all tid och allt engagemang som jag lagt på populärvetenskapligt berättande var mödan värd; jag kände mig väldigt uppskattad.” 🏆 sverigesungaakademi.se/barn-och-sam...
Happy and proud that Federica received this year's Cramér prize from the Cramér Society (and, I guess, by extension the Swedish Statistics Society). Incredibly well-deserved; extra fitting that the thesis dealt with challenging problems at the intersection of stats & large deviations.
You managed to live in Boston and not be converted to liking it even a little bit? Strong!
This is highlighting something that I believe is becoming increasingly problematic at technical universities in Sweden, and more generally (Swedish) society as far as education goes.
The similarities between writing mathematics and writing novels are piling up.
For over a week I have been trying to remember why I had put "Blocked" (and nothing else) in my calendar for all of Monday. Today it hit me: Sunday is the Super Bowl. Once again, the time difference struggle is real.
I guess now that it is official: excited to have joined the APT editorial board. Journal of Applied Probability is another journal that has always felt like "home" to me, so happy to be able to contribute more to it on the editorial side.
intellectual effort were interesting. With the increased use of LLMs to shape courses etc., I found hearing this comforting. Same thing with how everyone that is interviewed highlight and champion their students. Ok, back to caring for the sick people over here.
and refreshing to hear from some of the leading researchers in their fields. Sure, they might have arrived at this feeling later on in their careers, when the pressure of publishing and so on is gone, but still. Especially Stephen Boyd's comments on teaching and how it should be an intense
spoken at great length on the benefits and joys of teaching, how it is not something to do "on the side" of research etc. This is counter to all the incentives you will typically see at a local level (I am fortunate that it does not really apply to the places I am affiliated with, only some)
In particular, it has been wonderful to listen to the different thoughts on teaching and supervision. Of course there is a selection bias—there are of course other equally accomplished scientists that perhaps are not as suited for/will decline a podcast—but invariably so far they have all
As 3/5ths of the family has been down with the flu for over a week, I have had a lot of "free" (aka cannot work but also not directly occupied) time and have gone through lots of episodes of the InControl podcast that I had saved "for later". Supreme content for anyone in control/PDE/probability
Managed to set up an exam problem that was at the same time (much!) easier than I intended and just horrible to grade.
Second time in a row I have submitted something with several hours left until deadline. Feels strange to not have the adrenaline rush of "what if the submission portal does not load".
Currently thinking about starting some kind of activity for grad students and postdocs where we discuss these meta-matters—how to read and write papers, different ways to pick topics, how to approach seminars etc.—and something like this could be an interesting case study in that setting. (8/8)
process actually helps make the science better. Not in terms of the actual results, but in how we communicate it. Of course this could happen outside of the journal system, but I do not yet have a good, feasible idea for how that is not "send it to a friend/colleague that gives you comments". (7/8)
cumbersome derivations (Taylor expansions galore!). This is now the second paper in a row for Federica where the referee comments really highlighted some blindspots for us and allowed us to make the papers significantly better. Overall, I think it is good to highlight these cases, where the (6/8)
time, but in that we were building in a lot of implicit assumptions and interpretations. In hindsight it is clear that the paper is now (much!) better, it is aimed more directly at the intended audience, and the main results are easy to find without going through all the necessary but (5/8)