David Heath (probabilist)

David Clay Heath (~1943 – 11 August 2011) was an American probabilist, who is most famous for the co-invention of the Heath–Jarrow–Morton framework to model the evolution of the interest rate curve.

David Heath
Born
Died11 August 2011(2011-08-11) (aged 67–68)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materKalamazoo College
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Spouse(s)Judith Heath
ChildrenKelley, Michael, Susan
Scientific career
FieldsProbability Theory, Econometrics
InstitutionsUniversity of Minnesota
Cornell University
Carnegie-Mellon University
Doctoral advisorFrank Bardsley Knight

Biography

Early life

He was born in Oak Park, Illinois to W. Curtis and Margaret Wasson Heath. He graduated from Elkhart High School in 1960 and earned his bachelor's degree from Kalamazoo College in 1964.

Scientific career

Heath obtained his PhD in 1969 under the supervision of Frank Bardsley Knight at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign with a dissertation titled 'Probabilistic Analysis of Hyperbolic Systems of Partial Differential Equations'. After graduation, he became an assistant professor at the University of Minnesota. In the late 1970s, he moved to Cornell University where he joined the School of Operations Research and Industrial Engineering. There he founded the financial engineering program, becoming the Merrill Lynch Professor of Financial Engineering. In the late 1990s Heath moved to Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, where he became the Orion Hoch Professor of Mathematical Sciences, and where he stayed until his retirement in 2006.

Selected bibliography

  • Heath, David C., and William D. Sudderth. "On a theorem of de Finetti, oddsmaking, and game theory." The Annals of Mathematical Statistics 43, no. 6 (1972): 2072-2077.
  • Berry, Donald A., David C. Heath, and William D. Sudderth. "Red-and-black with unknown win probability." The Annals of Statistics 2, no. 3 (1974): 602-608.
  • Heath, David, and William Sudderth. "On finitely additive priors, coherence, and extended admissibility." The Annals of Statistics (1978): 333-345.
  • Billera, Louis J., David C. Heath, and Joseph Raanan. "Internal telephone billing rates—a novel application of non-atomic game theory." Operations Research 26, no. 6 (1978): 956-965.
  • Heath, David C., and William D. Sudderth. Continuous-time portfolio management: Minimizing the expected time to reach a goal. University of Minnesota, School of Statistics, 1984.
  • Heath, David, and William Sudderth. "Coherent inference from improper priors and from finitely additive priors." The Annals of Statistics (1989): 907-919.
  • Heath, David, Robert Jarrow, and Andrew Morton. "Bond pricing and the term structure of interest rates: A new methodology for contingent claims valuation." Econometrica 60, no. 1 (1992): 77-105.
  • Berry, Donald A., Robert W. Chen, Alan Zame, David C. Heath, and Larry A. Shepp. "Bandit problems with infinitely many arms." The Annals of Statistics (1997): 2103-2116.
  • Heath, David, Sidney Resnick, and Gennady Samorodnitsky. "Heavy tails and long range dependence in on/off processes and associated fluid models." Mathematics of Operations Research 23, no. 1 (1998): 145-165.
  • Heath, David, Eckhard Platen, and Martin Schweizer. "A comparison of two quadratic approaches to hedging in incomplete markets." Mathematical Finance 11, no. 4 (2001): 385-413.
  • Artzner, Philippe, Freddy Delbaen, Jean-Marc Eber, and David Heath. "Coherent Measures of Risk1." Risk management: value at risk and beyond (2002): 145.
  • Heath, David, and Martin Schweizer. "Martingales versus PDEs in finance: an equivalence result with examples." Journal of Applied Probability (2000): 947-957.
  • Artzner, Philippe, Freddy Delbaen, Jean-Marc Eber, David Heath, and Hyejin Ku. "Coherent multiperiod risk adjusted values and Bellman’s principle." Annals of Operations Research 152, no. 1 (2007): 5-22.

References

  • "Professor David Heath" (Web Page), Carnegie Mellon Center for Computational Finance
  • "David C. Heath Obituary", Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, 2011-08-28
  • "Obituary: David Heath will be remembered for taking mathematics to Wall Street", Mellon College of Science, 2011-09-19
  • "David Heath, co-Founder of Financial Engineering at Cornell, Dies at 68", Cornell University, Operations Research and Information Engineering, 2011-09-20
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