
UC Math Professor Honored at International Conference
Professor Magda Peligrad has spent her career studying probability theory and stochastic processesresearch that deals with dependent structures and covers various aspects of modeling dependence of random evolutions.
Probability theory and statistics are applied fields and by their nature they model the real world phenomena, Peligrad says. My research helps understanding the financial time series, random evolutions in statistical mechanics, as well as the performance of random algorithms used in most areas of research.
Conference participants.
Much of her research is instrumental to the field of mathematical sciences. Proof of this came in late June when her colleagues in France held a conference in her honor at the Sorbonne in Paris.
Limit Theorems for Dependent Data and Applications
, was organized by a number of Parisian universities to provide a survey of the research that has catalyzed from Peligrads foundational work.
I feel honored indeed, says Peligrad. In my view, the importance of the conference is the diffusion of ideas that will push this field further.
In my case, the recognition encourages me to work even harder, she continues.
Peligrad is a
within the McMicken College of Arts and Sciences. The results of her research have made the subject of 68 papers and various book chapters, and she has co-edited two volumes in probability theory. She is an associate editor for the Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications, and she continuously gains research support from organizations such as the National Science Foundation and the National Security Agency.
Read more about the Department of Mathematical Sciences:
Cryptography: Using Math to Keep Computers Secure
Math PhD student Daniel Cabarcas studies polynomials to help fight the algebraic attacks that threaten computer security.
Assistant Professor Michael Goldberg comes to the math department from Johns Hopkins University.
McMicken grad Robert Tkach is called one of "two pioneers of the science of optical nonlinearities in fiber optic communication systems."
Crunching Numbers for More Accurate Blood Tests
Statistics professor Paul Horn uses his expertise on reference intervals to help create guidelines set by the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute.
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