Thinking Probabilistically by Ariel Amir
Probability theory has diverse applications in a plethora of fields, including physics, engineering, computer science, chemistry, biology and economics. This book will familiarize students with various applications of probability theory, stochastic modeling and random processes, using examples from all these disciplines and more. The reader learns via case studies and begins to recognize the sort of problems that are best tackled probabilistically. The emphasis is on conceptual understanding, the development of intuition and gaining insight, keeping technicalities to a minimum. Nevertheless, a glimpse into the depth of the topics is provided, preparing students for more specialized texts while assuming only an undergraduate-level background in mathematics. The wide range of areas covered - never before discussed together in a unified fashion – includes Markov processes and random walks, Langevin and Fokker–Planck equations, noise, generalized central limit theorem and extreme values statistics, random matrix theory and percolation theory.
'A remarkable demonstration that advanced topics need not be esotericAmir takes us through random walks on networks, extreme value statistics, Kramers theory, anomalous diffusion and other topics generally omitted from introductory texts, always rooting every discussion in applications of terrific current interest. I found the discussion of Lévy-stable distributions especially insightful as a principled approach to the nonstandard walks that abound in contexts from biophysics to finance.' Philip C. Nelson, University of Pennsylvania
'The book is a suitable springboard for self-study because it introduces a wide variety of topics and contains many references to current work. In the classroom, the book can function either as the basis for a course in special topics or as a source of material to spice up more traditional statistical-mechanics courses … the methods for studying random phenomena introduced in Thinking Probabilistically will help readers understand reasoning techniques that may not be terribly familiar to physicists. Moreover, following the author's arguments is a rewarding intellectual exercise in its own right.' Rob de Ruyter, Physics Today
'The book is a suitable springboard for self-study because it introduces a wide variety of topics and contains many references to current work. In the classroom, the book can function either as the basis for a course in special topics or as a source of material to spice up more traditional statistical-mechanics courses … the methods for studying random phenomena introduced in Thinking Probabilistically will help readers understand reasoning techniques that may not be terribly familiar to physicists. Moreover, following the author's arguments is a rewarding intellectual exercise in its own right.' Rob de Ruyter, Physics Today
Ariel Amir is a Professor at Harvard University, Massachusetts. His research centers on the theory of complex systems.
SKU | NGR9781108789981 |
ISBN 13 | 9781108789981 |
ISBN 10 | 1108789986 |
Title | Thinking Probabilistically |
Author | Ariel Amir |
Condition | New |
Binding Type | Paperback |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Year published | 2020-12-17 |
Number of pages | 242 |
Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
Note | This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time |