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Unveiling the math behind your calendar

FEATURED | September 9, 2024
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF

杏吧视频 research explores statistical mysteries of everyday tasks, from Doodle polls to efficient scheduling

In a world where organizing a simple meeting can feel like herding cats, new research from 杏吧视频 reveals just how challenging finding a suitable meeting time becomes as the number of participants grows.

The study, published in the , dives into the mathematical complexities of this common task, offering new insights into why scheduling often feels so impossible.

Photo of Harsh Mathur
Harsh Mathur

鈥淚f you like to think the worst about people, then this study might be for you,鈥 quipped researcher Harsh Mathur, professor of physics at the College of Arts and Sciences at CWRU. 鈥淏ut this is about more than Doodle polls. We started off by wanting to answer this question about polls, but it turns out there is more to the story.鈥

Researchers used mathematical modeling to calculate the likelihood of successfully scheduling a meeting based on several factors: the number of participants (m), the number of possible meeting times (蟿) and the number of times each participant is unavailable (r).

What they found: As the number of participants grows, the probability of scheduling a successful meeting decreases sharply.

Specifically, the probability drops significantly when more than five people are involved鈥攅specially if participant availability remains consistent.

鈥淲e wanted to know the odds,鈥 Mathur said. 鈥淭he science of probability actually started with people studying gambling, but it applies just as well to something like scheduling meetings. Our research shows that as the number of participants grows, the number of potential meeting times that need to be polled increases exponentially.

鈥淭he project had started half in jest but this exponential behavior got our attention. It showed that scheduling meetings is a difficult problem, on par with some of the great problems in computer science.鈥

鈥楳ore to the story鈥

Interestingly, researchers found a parallel between scheduling difficulties and physical phenomena. They observed that as the probability of a participant rejecting a proposed meeting time increases, there鈥檚 a critical point where the likelihood of successfully scheduling the meeting drops sharply. It鈥檚 a phenomenon similar to what is known as 鈥減hase transitions鈥 in physics, Mathur said, such as ice melting into water.

鈥淯nderstanding phase transitions mathematically is a triumph of physics,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t's fascinating how something as mundane as scheduling can mirror the complexity of phase transitions.鈥

Mathur also noted the study鈥檚 broader implications, from casual scenarios like sharing appetizers at a restaurant to more complex settings like drafting climate policy reports, where agreement among many is needed.

鈥淐onsensus-building is hard,鈥 Mathur said. 鈥淟ike phase transitions, it鈥檚 complex. But that鈥檚 also where the beauty of mathematics lies鈥攊t gives us tools to understand and quantify these challenges.鈥

Mathur said the study contributes insights into the complexities of group coordination and decision-making, with potential applications across various fields.

Joining Mathur in the study were physicists , of Hamilton College, and , of the University of California, Santa Cruz.


For more information, contact Colin McEwen at colin.mcewen@case.edu.