Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Heavy-Tailed Distributions and Robustness in Economics and Finance




Heavy-Tailed Distributions and Robustness in Economics and Finance


Springer | Statistics | Jun 14 2015 | ISBN-10: 3319168762 | 119 pages | pdf | 1.7 mb




by Marat Ibragimov (Author), Rustam Ibragimov (Author), Johan Walden (Author)



From the Back Cover


This book focuses on general frameworks for modeling heavy-tailed distributions in economics, finance, econometrics, statistics, risk management and insurance. A central theme is that of (non-)robustness, i.e., the fact that the presence of heavy tails can either reinforce or reverse the implications of a number of models in these fields, depending on the degree of heavy-tailedness. These results motivate the development and applications of robust inference approaches under heavy tails, heterogeneity and dependence in observations. Several recently developed robust inference approaches are discussed and illustrated, together with applications.



About the Author


Since 2013, Marat Ibragimov works as an Associate Professor at Kazan (Volga Region) Federal University in Kazan, Russia. He graduated from the Department of Mathematics at Kazan State University in 1974 and received his Ph.D. from the Uzbek Academy of Sciences in 1982. His current research interests include econometric analysis of emerging, transition and post-Soviet markets, the study of income and wealth distribution and labour markets in emerging and transition countries, modelling of financial and economic crises, matrix theory and moment and probability inequalities, among others.




Since 2012, Rustam Ibragimov works as a Professor of Finance and Econometrics at the Imperial College Business School. Professor Ibragimov received his Ph.D. in Economics from Yale University in 2005. He also holds a Ph.D. degree in Mathematics from the Uzbek Academy of Sciences. Following his graduation from Yale and prior to joining the Imperial, Rustam Ibragimov was an Assistant Professor (2005-2009) and then an Associate Professor (2009-2012) at Harvard’s Economics Department. Professor Ibragimov’s current research interests include modelling crises and contagion in financial and economic markets and the analysis of their effects on properties of key models in economics and finance; development of robust econometric and statistical inference methods and their applications in financial econometrics.



Johan Walden is an Associate Professor of Finance at University of California at Berkeley, Haas School of Business. He received his Ph.D. in financial economics from Yale University. Professor Walden’s research is focused on asset pricing with information networks, financial intermediaries, and on risk management with heavy-tailed risks. He also has a Ph.D. in applied mathematics from Uppsala University, Sweden.



Topics

Statistics for Business, Economics, Mathematical Finance, Insurance


Statistical Theory and Methods


Econometrics











Life Science Automation Fundamentals and Applications by Mingjun Zhang




Life Science Automation Fundamentals and Applications (Bioinformatics & Biomedical Imaging) by Mingjun Zhang


English | July 31, 2007 | ISBN: 1596931051 | 526 Pages | PDF | 6 MB




Automation is facilitating incredible breakthroughs in everything from healthcare, pharmacology, and biotechnology to nanotechnology and genomics. Automation developers, scientists, and technicians need an increasingly sophisticated understanding of both the biological sciences and the engineering involved, and this comprehensive resource is the first interdisciplinary work that truly delivers. After a solid grounding in life science and automation engineering essentials, this indispensable resource describes state-of-the-art techniques for the design and development of sensors and actuators, lab-on-a-chip and bio-MEMs platforms, DNA and protein microarray fabrication automation, and drug delivery automation.










Natural Polymers, Volume 2: Nanocomposites (Repost)




Natural Polymers, Volume 2: Nanocomposites By A. Dufresne, Maya J. John, Sabu Thomas


2012 | 336 Pages | ISBN: 1849734038 | PDF | 17 MB








In the search for sustainable materials, natural polymers present an attractive alternative for many applications compared to their synthetic counterparts derived from petrochemicals. The two volume set, Natural Polymers, covers the synthesis, characterisation and applications of key natural polymeric systems including their morphology, structure, dynamics and properties. Volume one focuses on natural polymer composites, including both natural and protein fibres, and volume two on natural polymer nanocomposites. The first volume examines the characterization, life cycle assessment and new sources of natural fibres and their potential as a replacement for synthetic fibres in industrial applications. It then explores the important advancements in the field of wool, silk, spidersilk and mussel byssus fibres. The second volume looks at the properties and characterization of cellulose, chitosan, furanic, starch, wool and silk nanocomposites and the potential industrial applications of natural polymer nanocomposites. With contributions from leading researchers in natural polymers from around the globe, Natural Polymers provides a valuable reference for material scientists, polymer chemists and polymer engineers.