Previous events - Page 43
Welcome to the Geo-Wednesday in March! This month Kirstin Krüger, Professor at Meteorology and Oceanography, will give a talk about VIKINGS.
We introduce SMARTboost (boosting of symmetric smooth additive regression trees), a machine learning model capable of fitting complex functions in high dimensions, yet designed for good performance in small n and low signal-to-noise environments. SMARTboost inherits many of the qualities that have made boosted trees the most widely used machine learning tool for tabular data; it automatically adjusts model complexity, handles continuous and discrete features, can capture nonlinear functions in high dimensions without overfitting, performs variable selection, and can handle highly non-Gaussian features. The combination of smooth symmetric trees and of carefully designed Bayesian priors gives SMARTboost an edge (in comparison with a state-of-the-art tool like XGBoost) in most settings with continuous and mixed discrete-continuous features. Unlike other tree-based methods, it can also compute marginal effects.
Research Seminar Series features, Wanda Orlikowski, the Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Information Technologies and Organization Studies at MIT's Sloan School of Management, US.
Welcome to the a new Teaching and Learning Journal Club Meeting 15 march, at 12:15 PM.
Norway-Japan symposium on theoretical and experimental chemistry of complex systems
Business Mindset – Unlocking your potential as an innovator
Njord Seminar with talks by
Thomas Combriat (University of Oslo): "Cells on the move - Tickling biology with ultrasonic waves"
and
Andreas Grøvan Aspaas (University of Oslo): "What causes transient deformations in the Åknes landslide, Norway?"
MSc. Frøydis Sved Skottvoll at the Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, is defending her thesis «Liver organoids, mass spectrometry and separation science» for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor.
Doctoral candidate Mihaela-Alexandra Puica at the Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, is defending the thesis Advances in Wind Power Modeling: Merging Research and Market Experience for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor.
This talk is part of the Mechanics Lunch Seminar series. Bring-your-own-lunch and lots of questions.
Is it difficult to set aside time to write? The Academic Writing Centre arranges joint, structured “Shut Up & Write” sessions.
by
Alan Bischoff
From the Geological Survey of Finland
Hosted by Sverre Planke
Professor Justin William Wells, the Semiconductor physics section, UiO
Title: Key conclusions from the IPCC AR6 Working Group 2 report and links between impacts and adaptation assessments and physical climate science
Speaker: Richard Betts, UK Met. Office
Welcome to the opening of UiO’s first Byttebod for electrical and electronic equipment.
Every second Tuesday, CBA members gather for lunch and a talk. On March 8th 2022, the talk will be given by PhD student Camille Marie Crapart. Title: Modelling of TOC concentration in Fennoscandia
Simen Hellesund will defend his thesis “Searching for New Physics in Resonant and Non-Resonant Dilepton Final States With the ATLAS Detector at the LHC” for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor at the University of Oslo, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences.
Doctoral candidate Gard Olav Helle at the Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, is defending the thesis Instanton Floer Homology and Binary Polyhedral Spaces for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor.
Njord Seminar with Karianne Bergen (Brown University): "Big data for small earthquakes: data mining, deep learning and explainable AI"
Welcome to our GEOHYD Lunch Seminar Friday 4th of March @ 12:15 in Aud. 2, Geology building or via videolink using Zoom. The seminar is helt by Schuler & Westermann, Dept of Geosciences.
Johannes Røsok Eskilt, phd fellow at Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics, UiO.
Is it difficult to set aside time to write? The Academic Writing Centre arranges joint, structured “Shut Up & Write” sessions.
Is it difficult to set aside time to write? The Academic Writing Centre arranges joint, structured “Shut Up & Write” sessions.
by
Andrea Giuliani
From ETH, Zurich
Hosted by Reidar Trønnes