Mar 2 – 4, 2026
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Europe/Berlin timezone

When do World Models Successfully Learn Dynamic Systems?

Mar 2, 2026, 3:15 PM
45m
Room 1.067 (Math Building (20.30), Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)

Room 1.067

Math Building (20.30), Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

Englerstr. 2, 76131 Karlsruhe
Invited talk Invited talks 2

Speaker

Hanno Gottschalk (TU Berlin)

Description

In this work, we explore the use of compact latent representations with learned time dynamics ('World Models') to simulate physical systems. Drawing on concepts from control theory, we propose a theoretical framework that explains why projecting time slices into a low-dimensional space and then concatenating to form a history ('Tokenization') is so effective at learning physics datasets, and characterise when exactly the underlying dynamics admit a reconstruction mapping from the history of previous tokenized frames to the next. To validate these claims, we develop a sequence of models with increasing complexity, starting with least-squares regression and progressing through simple linear layers, shallow adversarial learners, and ultimately full-scale generative adversarial networks (GANs). We evaluate these models on a variety of datasets, including modified forms of the heat and wave equations, the chaotic regime 2D Kuramoto-Sivashinsky equation, and a challenging computational fluid dynamics (CFD) dataset of a 2D Kármán vortex street around a fixed cylinder, where our model is successfully able to recreate the flow.

Author

Hanno Gottschalk (TU Berlin)

Presentation materials

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