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         Time 
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         Monday 
           
          November 11 
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         Tuesday 
           
          November 12 
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         Wednesday 
           
          November 13 
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         Thursday 
           
          November 14 
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         Friday 
           
          November 15 
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         Location 
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         Room 
          230  
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         Room 
          230 
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         Room 
          230 
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                   Morning: 
                    Room 210 
          Afternoon: Room 230 
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                   Room 
                    210 
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         10:0011:00 
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         11:1512:15 
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         2:003:00 
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         3:30-4:30 
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         4:30-6:30 
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         CLS Reception 
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      | Speaker | 
      Title and Abstract | 
    
     
      | Filippini, Sara  | 
       
         An introduction to Hodge theory 
         We give an introduction to the basic concepts of Hodge theory, 
          including the notion of a pure Hodge structure and the Hodge filtration. 
          We then discuss the uses of this theory in the study of cohomology, 
          including the Hodge decomposition and the Lefschetz decomposition. 
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      | GarciaRaboso, Alberto | 
       
         Introduction to nonabelian Hodge theory: Higgs bundles and local 
          sytems I 
          Hodge theory can be extended to cohomology with coefficients 
          in nonabelian groups. For GLr, this results in a correspondence between 
          flat vector bundles (which, by the Riemann-Hilbert correspondence, are 
          the same as local systems), and so-called Higgs bundles. Over smooth 
          projective varieties, the latter are not only holomorphic, but in fact 
          algebraic, objects. We will discuss this correspondence and how it is 
          useful (among other things) for constructing variations of Hodge structure. 
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      | Harder, Andrew | 
       
         The KugaSatake construction 
         There is a well known construction of Kuga and Satake which 
          embeds the transcendental Hodge structure of any algebraic K3 surface 
          into the second cohomology group of an abelian variety. I will give 
          an overview of this construction and show how it can be turned into 
          an explicit geometric correspondence in some situations. 
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      | Kerr, Matt | 
       
         Algebraic and arithmetic properties of period maps 
          The three talks will cover Mumford-Tate groups and boundary 
          components, as well as limits of normal 
          functions and generalized Abel-Jacobi maps. 
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      | Laza, Radu | 
       
         Classical period domains 
          I will discuss the classification of Hermitian symmetric 
          domains, the connection between HSDs and VHS, and some examples 
          of moduli spaces uniformized by HSDs. 
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      | Peters, Chris | 
       
         Period domains and their differential geometry revisited 
          Griffiths period domains classify polarized Hodge structures; 
          they have a pure Lie-theoretic description as reductive domains. This 
          can be used to translate differential geometric properties on associated 
          bundles into properties for associated Lie-algebras. In particular, 
          this gives an explanation for the curvature properties for the natural 
          invariant metric on such domains. These results were all known in the 
          seventies of the last century and due to Griffiths and Schmid. They 
          obtained them making heavy use of detailed Lie-theory. The proposed 
          approach avoids this. Mixed Hodge structures can also be described by 
          period domains, but these are no longer reductive. The transformation 
          group acting transitively on such a domain is no longer semi-simple 
          and the natural metric in general is no longer invariant. This complicates 
          the curvature calculations. Nevertheless, in special cases which are 
          of interest in geometric applications one can deduce some properties 
          analogous to what happens in the pure case. The description of mixed 
          period domain was also known for some time and is due to Usui and Kaplan. 
          The curvature calculations were started by Pearlstein. In a joint work 
          in progress we are extending this result and give some applications. 
          It is my intention to explain this in 2 lectures focusing mainly on 
          the pure case. 
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      | Rayan, Steve | 
       
         Introduction to nonabelian Hodge theory: Higgs bundles and local 
          systems II 
          We will discuss interesting geometric aspects of the moduli 
          spaces for the objects introduced in Part I 
          in GarciaRabosos talk. 
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      | Ruddat, Helge | 
       
         Degenerations of Hodge structures 
          This talk concerns the behaviour of geometric variations 
          of Hodge structures near singular fibers in a family as studied by Schmid-Steenbrink. 
          We define the canonical extension of a vector bundle with connection 
          from the punctured disk to the disk and then extend variations of Hodge 
          structures by extending the Gauss-Manin connection. The limiting object 
          to be filled in is a mixed Hodge structure. We define nearby and vanishing 
          cycles sheaves and state various properties of these. 
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      | Schütt, Matthias | 
       
         [1] Picard numbers of quintic surfaces 
          The Picard number is a non-trivial invariant of an algebraic 
          surface which captures much of its inner structure. It is a fundamental 
          problem which Picard numbers occur within a given class of surfaces. 
          For the prototype example of quintics in P3, I will show that all numbers 
          1 and 45 indeed occur as Picard numbers. The main technique consists 
          in arithmetic deformations.  
        [2] 64 Lines on quartic surfaces 
        In a 1943 paper, Benjamino Segre claimed that a smooth complex 
          quartic surface contains at most 64 lines. However, his arguments turn 
          out to be incomplete, and at some places wrong. I will present joint 
          work with S. Rams which uses elliptic fibrations to give a complete 
          proof of the corresponding statement over any field of characteristic 
          other than 2 and 3. 
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      | Thompson, Alan | 
       
         Variations of Hodge structure and the period map 
          We begin by defining the period map, which relates families 
          of Kahler manifolds to the families of Hodge structures defined on their 
          cohomology, and discuss its properties. This will lead us to the more 
          general definition of a variation of Hodge structure and the Gauss-Manin 
          connection. 
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