Conference Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).

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Session Overview
Session
S 2 (1): Spatial stochastics, disordered media, and complex networks
Time:
Tuesday, 11/Mar/2025:
10:45 am - 12:25 pm

Session Chair: Chinmoy Bhattacharjee
Session Chair: Benedikt Jahnel
Location: POT 251
Floor plan

Potthoff Bau
Session Topics:
2. Spatial stochastics, disordered media, and complex networks

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Presentations
10:45 am - 11:10 am

Survival of an infection under dilutions in space and time

Benedikt Jahnel1,2, Anh Duc Vu2

1TU Braunschweig; 2WIAS Berlin

We study survival and extinction of a long-range infection process on a diluted one- dimensional lattice in discrete time. The infection can spread to distant vertices according to a Pareto distribution, however spreading is also prohibited at random times. We prove a phase transition in the recovery parameter via block arguments. This contributes to a line of research on directed percolation with long-range correlations in nonstabilizing random environments.


11:10 am - 11:35 am

On the contact process on dynamical random graphs with degree dependent dynamics

Anja Sturm, Natalia Cardona Tobon, Marcel Ortgiese, Marco Seiler

University of Göttingen, Germany

Recently, there has been increasing interest in interacting particle systems on evolving random graphs, respectively in time evolving random environments. In this talk we present results on the contact process in an evolving edge random environment on infinite (random) graphs. We in particular consider (infinite) Galton-Watson trees as the underlying random graph. We focus on an edge random environment that is given by a dynamical percolation whose opening and closing rates and probabilities are degree dependent. Our results concern the dependence of the critical infection rate for weak and strong survival on the random environment.



11:35 am - 12:00 pm

Meeting times via singular value decomposition

Anton Klimovsky1, Thomas van Belle2

1Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Germany; 2Universität Duisburg-Essen

We suggest a non-asymptotic matrix perturbation-theoretic approach to get sharp bounds on the expected meeting time of random walks on large (possibly random) graphs. We provide a formula for the expected meeting time in terms of the singular value decomposition of the diagonally killed generator of a pair of independent random walks, which we view as a perturbation of the generator. Employing a rank-one approximation of the diagonally killed generator as the proof of concept, we work out sharp bounds on the expected meeting time of simple random walks on sufficiently dense Erdős-Rényi random graphs.


12:00 pm - 12:25 pm

A Random Walk Approach to Broadcasting on Random Recursive Trees

Ernst Althaus, Lisa Hartung, Rebecca Steiner

Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz, Germany

In the broadcasting problem on trees, a $\{-1,1\}$-message originating in an unknown node is passed along the tree with a certain error probability $q$. The goal is to estimate the original message without knowing the order in which the nodes were informed. We show a connection to random walks with memory effects and use this to develop a novel approach to analyse the majority estimator on random recursive trees. With this powerful approach, we study the entire group of very simple increasing trees as well as shape exchangeable trees together. This also extends Addario-Berry et al. (2022) who investigated this estimator for uniform and linear preferential attachment random recursive trees.


 
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