Stephen Mitchell Samuels

Stephen Mitchell Samuels (1938, Brooklyn – July 26, 2012, Indiana) was a statistician and mathematician, known for his work on the secretary problem[1] and for the Samuels Conjecture involving a Chebyshev-type inequality for sums of independent, non-negative random variables.[2][3]

After completing his undergraduate degree at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he became a graduate student at Stanford University.[1] There he received his Ph.D. in 1964 with a thesis supervised by Samuel Karlin.[4] Samuels joined in 1964 the faculty of Purdue University and retired there in 2003 as professor emeritus of statistics and mathematics.[1] He did research on various topics in probability theory and its applications, dynamic optimization, and disclosure risk assessment for statistical microdata.[5]

Selected publications

References

  1. "Obituary. Stephen Samuels". Lafayette Journal & Courier. July 27, 2012.
  2. Paulin, Roland (2017). "On some conjectures of Samuels and Feige". ArXiv Preprint ArXiv:1703.05152. arXiv:1703.05152.
  3. Samuels, Stephen Mitchell (1966). "On a Chebyshev-type inequality for sums of independent random variables". The Annals of Mathematical Statistics: 248–259. JSTOR 2238704. Samuels proved his conjecture for the case n = 3.
  4. Stephen Mitchell Samuels at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  5. "Stephen M. Samuels, Professor Emeritus of Statistics and Mathematics". Purdue University.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.