Jump to content

Stephen Mitchell Samuels

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by OAbot (talk | contribs) at 03:44, 5 February 2021 (Open access bot: doi added to citation with #oabot.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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. ^ a b c "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.