Difference between revisions of "Video/What is...representation theory?"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
It would be useful to watch the video from [https://youtu.be/VYzhA_nj0sU?t=970 here]. | It would be useful to watch the video from [https://youtu.be/VYzhA_nj0sU?t=970 here]. | ||
{{# | {{#widget:YouTube | ||
|VYzhA_nj0sU| | |id=VYzhA_nj0sU | ||
|width=640 | |||
}} | }} | ||
= | {{PagePostfix | ||
|category_csd=Representation Theory,Linear Algebra,Data Science,Approximation | |||
= | |semantic_labels=Organized by:[[Organized by::VisualMath]] Presented by:[[Presented by::Daniel Tubbenhauer]] | ||
[[Organized by::VisualMath]] | }} | ||
[[ | |||
</noinclude> | </noinclude> |
Revision as of 08:43, 5 August 2022
Tubbenhauer, Daniel (Mar 30, 2022). What is...representation theory?. local page: VisualMath.
{{#ev:youtube
|VYzhA_nj0sU
}}
According to this video, the main thesis of Representation Theory is the linear approximation of algebraic objects. It would be useful to refer to the Semi-tensor product(STP) as developed by Daizhan Cheng. See following references:
- Analysis and Control of Boolean Networks A Semi-tensor Product Approach[1]
- A BRIEF TUTORIAL EXPOSITION OF SEMI-TENSOR PRODUCTS OF MATRICES[2]
Theory of Groups of Finite Order
The end of this video extensively discusses the idea of William Burnside's work on Theory of Groups of Finite Order[3]. The critical message can be summarized in the second version (published in 1911, which stated the following message:
...it is now more true to say that for further advances in the abstract theory one must look largely to the representation of a group as a group of linear substitutions.
It would be useful to watch the video from here.
References
- ↑ Cheng, Daizhan; Qi, Hongsheng; Li, Zhiqiang (2011). Analysis and Control of Boolean Networks:A Semi-tensor Product Approach. local page: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-0-85729-097-7.
- ↑ Rushdi, Ali Muhammad; Ghaleb, Fares (August 28, 2017). "A BRIEF TUTORIAL EXPOSITION OF SEMI-TENSOR PRODUCTS OF MATRICES". local page: Research Gate.
- ↑ Burnside, William (1897). Theory of Groups of Finite Order. local page: Cambridge University Press.
Related Pages
Organized by:VisualMath Presented by:Daniel Tubbenhauer