Conférence annuelle du GDR branchement

Europe/Paris
Orsay

Orsay

307 rue Michel Magat
Description

Le GdR Branchement est un axe du Réseau Thématique (RT) Mathématiques et Physique de l'INSMI. L'objectif de cet axe est de fédérer, animer et coordonner une communauté scientifique large unie par un thème d'intérêt commun : le branchement.

Le semaine est divisée en deux parties : des mini-cours seront dispensés lundi et mardi, puis des exposés de recherche prendront la suite le reste de la semaine. La conférence se terminera vendredi midi.

 

École de recherche - 27 et 28 Janvier 2025 

3 mini-cours 
  • Serte Donderwinkel 
  • Lisa Hartung
  • Patricia Reynaud-Bouret

Conférence scientifique - 29, 30 et 31 Janvier 2025 

Liste des orateurs et oratrices confirmé·e·s

  • Eleanor Archer
  • Irene Ayuso Ventura
  • Quentin Berger
  • Nicolas Broutin
  • Manon Costa
  • Bertrand Cloez
  • Loren Coquille
  • William Da Silva
  • Marie Doumic
  • Jean-Jil Duchamps
  • Claude Godrèche
  • Alejandro Hernandez-Wences
  • Yueyun Hu
  • Pierre Le Doussal
  • Jean-François Le Gall
  • Quansheng Liu
  • Jean-Michel Roquejoffre
  • Guilhem Semerjian
  • Julie Tourniaire
  • Anita Winter
Participants
  • Adrianus Twigt
  • Alejandro H. Wences
  • Alexandre Legrand
  • Alice Contat
  • Aline Marguet
  • Anita Winter
  • Antoine Aurillard
  • Antonio Ocello
  • Arthur Blanc-Renaudie
  • Arvind Singh
  • Bastien Mallein
  • Bertrand Cloez
  • Breki Pálsson
  • Camille Cazaux
  • Camille Coron
  • Clément Foucart
  • Cyril Marzouk
  • Daniel Amankwah
  • Elaine Herrera
  • Eleanor Archer
  • Emmanuel Kammerer
  • Eugène FERRAGU
  • François Bienvenu
  • Frédérique Watbled
  • Félix Rebotier
  • Gabriel Flath
  • Gregory Schehr
  • Guilhem Semerjian
  • Guillaume Blanc
  • Irene Ayuso Ventura
  • Jean-François LE GALL
  • Jean-Jil Duchamps
  • Jean-René Chazottes
  • Jeremie Bettinelli
  • Julie Tourniaire
  • Julien Barral
  • Julien Weibel
  • Laurent Tournier
  • LIANGHUI LUO
  • Louis Chataignier
  • Lucas Gerin
  • Lucile Laulin
  • Luis Almeida
  • Madeleine Kubasch
  • Manon Costa
  • Mathieu Mourichoux
  • Mathilde André
  • Matteo D'Achille
  • Michel Pain
  • Nicolas Broutin
  • Nicolas CURIEN
  • Nicolas Tokka
  • Nicolas Zalduendo
  • Olivier Henard
  • Pascal Hanigk
  • Patricia Reynaud-Bouret
  • Patrick Hoscheit
  • Philippe Marchal
  • Quansheng Liu
  • Quentin Berger
  • Serte Donderwinkel
  • Shen Lin
  • Simon Delalande
  • Sonia Boulal
  • Stéphane Munier
  • Tanguy Lions
  • Thomas Budzinski
  • Vanessa Dan
  • Vianney Brouard
  • vincent bansaye
  • Vincent Viau
  • William Da Silva
  • William Fleurat
  • Yueyun Hu
  • Zikun Ouyang
  • Édouard Maurel-Segala
  • Éric Brunet
  • +9
    • 08:30 09:00
      Accueil 30m
    • 09:00 10:20
      Mini cours : F-KPP equations, Feynman-Kac formulas, and branching Brownian motion 1h 20m

      In this minicourse, I will explain how Feynman-Kac formulas can be used to solve Fisher-Kolmogorov-Petrovsky-Pikunov equations (F-KPP). Maury Bramson first used this approach in his seminal paper on the F-KPP equation about 50 years ago. We will revisit his approach and then also apply this technique to systems of F-KPP equations. Moreover, I will explain the duality between (certain) F-KPP equations and spatial branching processes (such as branching Brownian motion).

      Orateur: Lisa Hartung
    • 10:20 10:40
      coffee break 20m
    • 10:40 12:00
      Mini cours : Hawkes processes to model biological neuronal network 1h 20m

      I will give an introductory course on point processes that are used to model nueornal activity in the brain. I will especially focus on Hawkes processes even if I will recall some basic notions on Poisson processes as well. I will review the various methods to simulate such networks when the size is huge and comparable to animal brains or brain areas. A new algorithm especially involves Kalikow decomposition and can be seen as a branching process. Based on this view, we can also go a step further and try to understand how such neuronal network may learn to classify thanks to caracteristics detection.

      Orateur: Patricia Reynaud-Bouret
    • 12:00 13:30
      Lunch break 1h 30m
    • 13:30 14:50
      Mini cours: Scaling limits of branching random walks 1h 20m

      We consider a branching random walk whose genealogy is given by the family tree of a Bienaymé branching process conditioned to have n vertices. Think of this model as a random tree in which each vertex has a spatial location that is given by the position of its parent plus its own random displacement.

      In the first lecture, we will consider the convergence under rescaling of the underlying tree to the Brownian continuum random tree, using a stick-breaking construction of the tree.

      In the second lecture, we will enrich the stick-breaking construction to also encode the branching random walk, and show convergence under rescaling to the Brownian snake.

      In the third and final lecture, we will discuss an application to the difference of the height process and Lukasiewicz path of Bienaymé trees, and an application to the height process of random looptrees.

      These lectures are partially based on a forthcoming work with Louigi-Addario Berry, Christina Goldschmidt and Rivka Mitchell.

      Orateur: Serte Donderwinkel
    • 15:00 16:20
      Mini cours : F-KPP equations, Feynman-Kac formulas, and branching Brownian motion 1h 20m

      In this minicourse, I will explain how Feynman-Kac formulas can be used to solve Fisher-Kolmogorov-Petrovsky-Pikunov equations (F-KPP). Maury Bramson first used this approach in his seminal paper on the F-KPP equation about 50 years ago. We will revisit his approach and then also apply this technique to systems of F-KPP equations. Moreover, I will explain the duality between (certain) F-KPP equations and spatial branching processes (such as branching Brownian motion).

      Orateur: Lisa Hartung
    • 16:20 16:40
      Coffee break 20m
    • 16:40 18:00
      Lightning Talks 1h 20m
    • 09:00 10:20
      Mini cours : Hawkes processes to model biological neuronal network 1h 20m

      I will give an introductory course on point processes that are used to model nueornal activity in the brain. I will especially focus on Hawkes processes even if I will recall some basic notions on Poisson processes as well. I will review the various methods to simulate such networks when the size is huge and comparable to animal brains or brain areas. A new algorithm especially involves Kalikow decomposition and can be seen as a branching process. Based on this view, we can also go a step further and try to understand how such neuronal network may learn to classify thanks to caracteristics detection.

      Orateur: Patricia Reynaud-Bouret (Université Côte d'Azur, CNRS, LJAD)
    • 10:20 10:40
      Coffee break 20m
    • 10:40 12:00
      Mini cours: Scaling limits of branching random walks 1h 20m

      We consider a branching random walk whose genealogy is given by the family tree of a Bienaymé branching process conditioned to have n vertices. Think of this model as a random tree in which each vertex has a spatial location that is given by the position of its parent plus its own random displacement.

      In the first lecture, we will consider the convergence under rescaling of the underlying tree to the Brownian continuum random tree, using a stick-breaking construction of the tree.

      In the second lecture, we will enrich the stick-breaking construction to also encode the branching random walk, and show convergence under rescaling to the Brownian snake.

      In the third and final lecture, we will discuss an application to the difference of the height process and Lukasiewicz path of Bienaymé trees, and an application to the height process of random looptrees.

      These lectures are partially based on a forthcoming work with Louigi-Addario Berry, Christina Goldschmidt and Rivka Mitchell.

      Orateur: Serte Donderwinkel
    • 12:00 13:30
      lunch break 1h 30m
    • 13:30 14:40
      Mini cours : F-KPP equations, Feynman-Kac formulas, and branching Brownian motion 1h 10m

      In this minicourse, I will explain how Feynman-Kac formulas can be used to solve Fisher-Kolmogorov-Petrovsky-Pikunov equations (F-KPP). Maury Bramson first used this approach in his seminal paper on the F-KPP equation about 50 years ago. We will revisit his approach and then also apply this technique to systems of F-KPP equations. Moreover, I will explain the duality between (certain) F-KPP equations and spatial branching processes (such as branching Brownian motion).

      Orateur: Lisa Hartung
    • 14:40 15:00
      Coffee break 20m
    • 15:00 16:10
      Mini cours : Hawkes processes to model biological neuronal network 1h 10m

      I will give an introductory course on point processes that are used to model nueornal activity in the brain. I will especially focus on Hawkes processes even if I will recall some basic notions on Poisson processes as well. I will review the various methods to simulate such networks when the size is huge and comparable to animal brains or brain areas. A new algorithm especially involves Kalikow decomposition and can be seen as a branching process. Based on this view, we can also go a step further and try to understand how such neuronal network may learn to classify thanks to caracteristics detection.

      Orateur: Patricia Reynaud-Bouret (Université Côte d'Azur, CNRS, LJAD)
    • 16:10 17:20
      Mini cours: Scaling limits of branching random walks 1h 10m

      We consider a branching random walk whose genealogy is given by the family tree of a Bienaymé branching process conditioned to have n vertices. Think of this model as a random tree in which each vertex has a spatial location that is given by the position of its parent plus its own random displacement.

      In the first lecture, we will consider the convergence under rescaling of the underlying tree to the Brownian continuum random tree, using a stick-breaking construction of the tree.

      In the second lecture, we will enrich the stick-breaking construction to also encode the branching random walk, and show convergence under rescaling to the Brownian snake.

      In the third and final lecture, we will discuss an application to the difference of the height process and Lukasiewicz path of Bienaymé trees, and an application to the height process of random looptrees.

      These lectures are partially based on a forthcoming work with Louigi-Addario Berry, Christina Goldschmidt and Rivka Mitchell.

      Orateur: Serte Donderwinkel
    • 08:30 09:00
      Acceuil 30m
    • 09:00 09:45
      Non-linear conductances of Galton-Watson trees 45m

      Some statistical mechanics models on trees may sometimes reduce to the study of some "simple" tree recursion; this is for instance the case for the Ising model and FK-percolation model. It turns out that when the recursion is concave, we can compare this tree recursion to the one verified by (possibly non-linear) resistive networks.

      I will present some recent work with Irene Ayuso Ventura (Durham), in which we obtain precise estimates on the asymptotic behaviour of non-linear conductances of Galton-Watson trees, also deriving some information on the FK-percolation model on random trees.

      Orateur: Quentin Berger (Sorbonne Université)
    • 09:45 10:30
      TBA 45m
      Orateur: Irene Ayuso Ventura (Durham University)
    • 10:30 10:50
      Coffee break 20m
    • 10:50 11:35
      TBA 45m
      Orateur: Matteo D'Achille (Laboratoire de Mathématiques d’Orsay, Université Paris-Saclay)
    • 11:40 12:30
      Discounted tree sums in branching random walks. 50m

      This talk is based on a joint work with Eile Aïdékon and Zhan Shi. Let $(V(u),\, u\in T)$ be a (supercritical) branching random walk and $(\eta_u,\,u\in T)$ be positive marks on the vertices of the tree, distributed in an i.i.d. fashion. Following Aldous and Bandyopadhyay (2005), for each infinite ray $\xi$ of the tree, we associate the {\it discounted tree sum} $D(\xi)$ which is the sum of the $e^{-V(u)}\eta_u$ taken along the ray. We take interest in the finiteness of $\sup_\xi D(\xi)$. To this end, we study the extreme behaviour of the local time processes of the paths $(V(u),\,u\in \xi)$. It answers a question of Nicolas Curien, and partially solves Open Problem 31 of Aldous and Bandyopadhyay.

      Orateur: M. Yueyun Hu
    • 12:40 14:00
      lunch break 1h 20m
    • 14:00 14:45
      The planted matching problem 45m

      This talk will present some results on the planted matching problem, an inference problem where the goal is to recover a perfect matching hidden (planted) in a weighted graph, the weights on the planted and non-planted edges being drawn from two different distributions. The results are obtained with statistical mechanics techniques, and in particular a mapping to branching random walks.

      Joint work with Gabriele Sicuro and Lenka Zdeborova, Phys. Rev. E 102, 022304 (2020).

      Orateur: M. Guilhem Semerjian
    • 14:45 15:30
      Products of positive random matrices and branching processes in random environments: limit theorems and large deviations 45m

      In this talk, I will present some recent progress in the study of products of positive random matrices and branching processes in random environments. In particular, a Perron-Frobenius type theorem and stable convergence theorem for products of positive random matrices, and a Bahadur-Rao type precise large deviation result for multitype branching processes in random environments, will be presented. (Mainly based on joint works with Ion GRAMA and Thi Trang NGUYEN)

      Orateur: M. Liu Quansheng
    • 15:35 16:20
      SLE(6) on Liouville quantum gravity as a growth-fragmentation process. 45m

      We study the branching structure induced by a space-filling SLE(6) exploration of the quantum disc with matching parameter. We prove that it can be described as one of the growth-fragmentation processes introduced by Bertoin, Budd, Curien and Kortchemski in the context of planar maps. Importantly, our arguments are elementary, relying only on planar Brownian motion, and requiring no prior knowledge on LQG, once translated through the mating of trees. To this end, we develop new elements of excursion theory for cone excursions of Brownian motion and explore their connections to stable Lévy processes. This set of tools provides new elementary proofs of some of the key properties of the above SLE/LQG coupling. This talk is based on joint work with Ellen Powell (Durham) and Alex Watson (UCL).

      Orateur: M. William DA SILVA
    • 15:55 16:15
      Coffee break 20m
    • 16:30 17:15
      Local times of Brownian motion indexed by the Brownian tree 45m

      Brownian motion indexed by the Brownian tree appears in the
      asymptotics of many models of combinatorics or statistical physics,
      and is also closely related to super-Brownian motion. We
      consider the process of local times of (one-dimensional) Brownian motion
      indexed by the Brownian tree and we show that, although this
      process is not Markov, the pair formed by the local time and
      its derivative is a Markov process. In a work in collaboration with
      Ed Perkins, we prove that this pair satisfies a stochastic
      differential equation whose drift involves the classical Airy function.
      This is an analog of the well-known Ray-Knight theorems
      for linear Brownian motion.

      Orateur: M. Jean-François Le Gall
    • 09:00 09:45
      A branching particle system as a model of FKPP fronts 45m

      The FKPP equation is a common model in population dynamics, describing how a population spreads and grows over time and space, resulting in wave-like patterns.
      Recent studies by Birzu, Hallatschek and Korolev on the noisy FKPP equation with Allee effects (or cooperation) suggest the existence of three classes of fluctuating wavefronts: pulled, semipushed and fully pushed fronts.
      In this talk, I will introduce an analytically tractable model for fluctuating fronts, describing the internal mechanisms that drive the invasion of a habitat by a cooperating population. I will then use this model to explain how such mechanisms shape the genealogy of the population.

      Orateur: Julie Tourniaire (Université de Franche-Comté)
    • 09:45 10:30
      Front propagation in system of mean field game type modelling thediffusion of knowledge. 45m

      The question under study, at large intermediate times, of a system,
      proposed by the economists Lucas and Moll, aimed at describing the growth of an economy by means of diffusion of knowledge. The individual agents in the economy are supposed to share their time between learning and producing. They advance their knowledge by
      learning from each other and via internal innovation, and their density obeys a forward in time equation of reaction-diffusion type. The learning strategy of the agents is based on the solution to a backward in time nonlocal Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman equation that is
      coupled to the equation for the agents density. The result is a system of the mean-field game type. An important parameter, that measures how successful the learning is, determines different asymptotic regimes. One of them, that does not
      seem to have been identified in the literature, where most of the
      agents spend almost all their time to learn, and whose large
      intermediate time behaviour has a lot to do with Fisher-KPP
      propgation, will be especially discussed.

      Joint work with H. Berestycki, A. Novikov, L. Ryzhik

      Orateur: Jean-Michel Roquejoffre
    • 10:40 11:00
      coffee break 20m
    • 10:45 11:30
      On the first positive position of a random walker 45m

      The distribution of the first positive position reached by a random walker starting from the origin plays a fundamental role in describing the statistics of extremes and records in one-dimensional random walks.
      We present a comprehensive study of this distribution, with a particular focus on its moments and asymptotic behaviour, in the case where the step distribution is continuous and symmetric, encompassing both diffusive random walks and Lévy flights.

      Orateur: M. Claude Godrèche
    • 11:30 12:15
      Avalanches, clusters, and long range branching processes 45m
      Orateur: Pierre Le Doussal
    • 12:40 14:10
      Lunch break 1h 30m
    • 14:00 14:45
      Stabilité en temps long de processus de Hawkes inhibés 45m

      Dans cet exposé, je présenterai quelques résultats récents sur le comportement à long terme des processus de Hawkes inhibés, à la fois en temps continu et en temps discret. En particulier, nous soulignerons le rôle complexe de l'inhibition dans la stabilité des processus de Hawkes.

      Orateur: Manon Costa (Institut de Mathématiques de Toulouse)
    • 14:45 15:30
      Law of large numbers and central limit theorem for branching processes 45m

      In this talk, we consider branching processes in infinite dimension; that is, a particle system where each particle follows Markov dynamics independently of the others between particle birth and death events. This includes growth-fragmentation processes, branching diffusions, Bellman-Harris processes... We will present recent results on the laws of large numbers and central limit theorems for empirical measure convergence. The latter are based on relatively weak assumptions about the underlying dynamics: the state space may be non-compact, the dynamics non-reversible, the branching non-local...

      Orateur: Bertrand CLOEZ
    • 15:45 16:30
      Epidemic modeling and geodesics in layered directed configuration models 45m

      Some models of discrete-time epidemics can be studied in the larger setting of first-passage percolation in multitype directed configuration models, where edges have an integer length representing transmission delays. Through directed breadth-first explorations and coupling with multitype branching processes on countable state spaces, we study the distribution of geodesics between several random points, as the population tends to infinity. Under general conditions, we show convergence of the (shifted) length of geodesics to the first points of Cox processes with given intensities. Going back to our application, this allows us to obtain scaling limits for the "epidemic curve", extending previous works [Barbour and Reinert, 2013] to a discrete-time setting, under minimal assumptions. This is an ongoing joint work with Mathilde André.

      Orateur: Jean-Jil Duchamps (Université de Franche-Comté, Besançon, France)
    • 15:50 16:10
      Coffee break 20m
    • 16:30 17:15
      Self-similarity: a new perspective in mathematical population genetics. 45m

      In this joint project with Arno Siri-Jégousse, we introduce a novel research program connecting the fields of mathematical population genetics and self-similar (SS) Markov processes in infinite dimensions. Specifically, we propose a shift in focus from the prevalent paradigm based on the branching property as a tool to analyze the structure of population models, to one based on the self-similarity property. By extending the well-known Lamperti transformation for SS Markov processes to the Banach-valued case, we generalized the celebrated work of Birkner et al. (2005) in population genetics. They describe the genealogies of populations modeled as a measure-valued alpha-stable branching process in terms of the subfamily of Beta coalescents. We describe the genealogies of SS populations whose total size evolves as any positive SS Markov process, in terms of general Lambda coalescents. Along the way we uncover a new duality structure between measure-valued processes on the one hand, and a pair composed of a Lambda-coalescent and a Lévy process on the other. This extends the well-known duality relation between Lambda Fleming-Viot processes and Lambda coalescents of Bertoin and Le Gall (2003).

      Orateur: Alejandro Hernandez Wences (LAAS - CNRS)
    • 09:00 09:45
      Scaling limit of the Aldous-Broder chain on high-dimensional torii 45m

      The CRT is the scaling limit of the UST on the complete graph. The Aldous-Broder chain on a graph G=(V,E) is a MC with values in the space of rooted trees with vertices in V that is invariant under the uniform distribution on the space of rooted trees spanning G. In Evans, Pitman and Winter (2006) the so-called root growth with regrafting process (RGRG) was constructed. It was further shown that the suitable rescaled Aldous-Broder chain converges to the RGRG weakly with respect to the GH-topology. It was shown in Peres and Revelle (2005) that (up to a dimension depending constant factor) the CRT is also the G-weak scaling limit of the UST on the d-dimensional torus, d ≥ 5. This result was recently strengthens in Archer, Nachmias and Shalev (2024) to convergence with respect to the GH-weak topology, and therefore also with respect to the GH-topology. In this talk we show that also the suitable rescaled Aldous-Broder chain on the high-dimensional torus converges to the RGRG weakly with respect to the GH-topology when initially started in the trivial rooted tree.

      Orateur: Anita Winter
    • 09:45 10:30
      Quenched critical percolation on Galton-Watson trees. 45m

      We consider critical percolation on a supercritical Galton- Watson tree with mean offspring m > 1. It is well known that the critical percolation probability for this model is 1/m and that the root cluster has the distribution of a critical Galton-Watson tree. For this reason, many properties of the cluster are well understood, such as aymptotics for long range survival probabilities, the size of the n-th generation conditioned on survival (the “Yaglom limit”), and convergence of the entire cluster to a branching process/stable tree. All of these results as stated are annealed, that is, we take the expectation with respect to the distribution of the tree and the percolation configuration simultaneously. The goal of this talk is to consider the quenched regime: are the same properties true for almost any realisation of the tree? We will see that this is indeed the case, although some scaling constants will depend on the tree.
      Based on joint works with Quirin Vogel and Tanguy Lions

      Orateur: Eleanor Archer
    • 10:40 11:00
      Coffee break 20m
    • 10:45 11:30
      Asymptotic analysis and estimation of depolymerization models 45m

      The depolymerization (i.e. progressive shortening) of large molecules can be modeled by discrete Becker-Döring-type equations, or by continuous equations. In many applications, the dynamic nature of the experiments, as well as their nanometric scale, makes it difficult to estimate quantitatively, or even simply to decipher the mechanisms involved.
      In this talk, I will discuss two problems inspired by experiments carried out by Human Rezaei's team at INRAE on the depolymerization of PrP protein fibers (responsible for prion diseases). The first, in collaboration with Philippe Moireau, is an inverse problem consisting in the estimation of the initial condition from the time dynamics of a moment of the solution. The second project, in collaboration with Klemens Fellner, Mathieu Mezache and Juan Velazquez, is the design and analysis of an oscillating depolymerization model - the standard models being unable to account for the sustained oscillations observed experimentally.

      Orateur: Marie Doumic
    • 11:30 12:15
      Minorants convexes, processus de fragmentation/coalescence et limites d’échelle 45m

      Je présenterai une manière de construire des arbres aléatoires basée sur les minorants convexes de fonctions (aléatoires). Dans le cas Brownien, cette procédure est reliée au coalescent additif et à l'arbre continu Brownien, c'est-à-dire la limite d'échelle d'arbres uniformes, et de la fragmentation naturelle qui consiste à retirer les arêtes dans un ordre aléatoire.

      En modifiant un peu la fonction de départ, on obtient un arbre lié au coalescent multiplicatif (graphes aléatoires) et à l'arbre couvrant minimum d'un graphe complet pondéré aléatoirement. Cette construction conduit aussi à la définition naturelle de nouveaux processus de coalescence/fragmentation liés à des graphes aléatoires contraints et/ou à la percolation d'invasion avec sources multiples.

      L'exposé sera basé sur des travaux en commun avec J.-F. Marckert d'une part et Arthur Rousseau d'autre part.

      Orateur: Nicolas Broutin
    • 12:40 14:00
      Lunch break 1h 20m