My name is Mason Porter. I am a Professor in the Department of Mathematics at UCLA. Previously I was Professor of Nonlinear and Complex Systems in the Mathematical Institute at University of Oxford. I was also a Tutorial Fellow of Somerville College.
Monday, September 28, 2020
RIP Jay Johnstone (1945–2020)
Saturday, September 26, 2020
Personal Dice
Thanks very much to @chadtopaz for designing these dice for me!
— Mason Porter (@masonporter) September 27, 2020
It was awesome to wake up to these designs on social media.
I need to get these made in physical form. I especially want something in d20 form. pic.twitter.com/20gx0Vy6fq
Thursday, September 17, 2020
2020 Ig Nobel Laureates
(奚广安) Xi Guang-An, (莫天祥) Mo Tian-Xiang, (杨康生) Yang Kang-Sheng, (杨广生) Yang Guang-Sheng, and (凌显四) Ling Xian Si, five professional hitmen in Guangxi, China, who managed a contract for a hit job (a murder performed for money) in the following way: After accepting payment to perform the murder, Xi Guang-An then instead subcontracted the task to Mo Tian-Xiang, who then instead subcontracted the task to Yang Kang-Sheng, who then instead subcontracted the task to Yang Guang-Sheng, who then instead subcontracted the task to Ling Xian-Si, with each subsequently enlisted hitman receiving a smaller percentage of the fee, and nobody actually performing a murder.
Wednesday, September 16, 2020
"Spatial Applications of Topological Data Analysis: Cities, Snowflakes, Random Structures, and Spiders Spinning Under the Influence"
Title: Spatial Applications of Topological Data Analysis: Cities, Snowflakes, Random Structures, and Spiders Spinning Under the Influence
Authors: Michelle Feng and Mason A. Porter
Abstract: Spatial networks are ubiquitous in social, geographical, physical, and biological applications. To understand the large-scale structure of networks, it is important to develop methods that allow one to directly probe the effects of space on structure and dynamics. Historically, algebraic topology has provided one framework for rigorously and quantitatively describing the global structure of a space, and recent advances in topological data analysis have given scholars a new lens for analyzing network data. In this paper, we study a variety of spatial networks—including both synthetic and natural ones—using topological methods that we developed recently for analyzing spatial systems. We demonstrate that our methods are able to capture meaningful quantities, with specifics that depend on context, in spatial networks and thereby provide useful insights into the structure of those networks. We illustrate these ideas with examples of synthetic networks and dynamics on them, street networks in cities, snowflakes, and webs that were spun by spiders under the influence of various psychotropic substances.
Saturday, September 12, 2020
Usage of the Word 'Oy'
Usage of the word 'oy' from The Joys of Yiddish: "It is uttered in as many ways as the utterer's histrionic ability permits." pic.twitter.com/Jwz5YmK5oM
— Mason Porter (@masonporter) September 13, 2020
Friday, September 11, 2020
"{Location, Location, Location}"
I am going to steal the mouseover text for other nefarious purposes: "The most important attributes of a vector in 3-space are {Location, Location, Location}"
Tuesday, September 08, 2020
RIP Paul Steen (?? – 2020)
I took a class on bifurcation theory from Paul, who was very supportive. My class project, in which I needed to use AUTO (an important aspect of the course), led to this publication.
Here is an excerpt from the Acknowledgements section:
Additionally, we express our gratitude toward Alan Champneys for several productive suggestions regarding the numerics, Alejandro Rodríguez-Luis for providing a preprint of his manuscript, and Paul Steen, whose guidance for this work as a project for ChE 753 (on which this paper is based) was particularly valuable.
Sunday, September 06, 2020
RIP Lou Brock (1939–2020)
(Tip of the cap to Gregg Schneider.)
Wednesday, September 02, 2020
RIP Tom Seaver (1944–2020)
Tuesday, September 01, 2020
UCLA's New Undergraduate Major in "Data Theory"
The video blurb about @UCLA's new undergraduate major (which I helped design) in "Data Theory" went live a week and a half ago, and I managed not to notice until now.
— Mason Porter (@masonporter) September 1, 2020
Here it is: https://t.co/iIZVPxUCK8
Update: Also see some hyperlinks in my previous blog entry about our new major.