Applied Category Theory at NIST (Part 2)
Azimuth 2018-04-18
Here are links to the slides and videos for most of the talks from this workshop:
• Applied Category Theory: Bridging Theory & Practice, March 15–16, 2018, NIST, Gaithersburg, Maryland, USA. Organized by Spencer Breiner and Eswaran Subrahmanian.
They give a pretty good picture of what went on. Spencer Breiner put them up here; what follows is just a copy of what’s on his site.
Unfortunately, the end of Dusko Pavlovic’s talk, as well as Ryan Wisnesky’s and Steve Huntsman’s were lost due to a technical error. You can also find a Youtube playlist with all of the videos here.
Introduction to NIST:
Ram Sriram – NIST and Category Theory
Spencer Breiner – Introduction
Invited talks:
Bob Coecke – From quantum foundations to cognition via pictures
Dusko Pavlovic – Security Science in string diagrams (partial video)
John Baez – Compositional Design and Tasking of Networks (Part 1)
John Foley – Compositional Design and Tasking of Networks (Part 2)
David Spivak – A higher-order temporal logic for dynamical systems
Lightning Round Talks:
Ryan Wisnesky – Categorical Databases (no video)
Steve Huntsman – Towards an operad of goals (no video)
Bill Regli – Disrupting Interoperability (no slides)
Evan Patterson -Applied Category Theory in Data Science
Brendan Fong – Data Structures for Network Languages
Stephane Dugowson – A short introduction to a general theory of interactivity
Michael Robinson – Sheaf Methods for Inference
Cliff Joslyn – Seeking a Categorical Systems Theory via the Category of Hypergraphs
Helle Hvid Hansen – Long-Term Values in MDP’s, Corecursively
Alberto Speranzon – Localization and Planning for Autonomous Systems Via (Co)homology Computation
Josh Tan – Indicator Frameworks (no slides)
Breakout round report