This book is a one-semester upper-level undergraduate treatment of some of the fundamental probabilistic models that arise in many diverse applications. The presentation of these models is “computational” in the sense that it is easily adapted to computer-based Monte Carlo simulation.
A guiding principle was to be as rigorous as possible without the use of measure theory. Some of the topics contained herein are:
· Fundamental limit theorems such as the weak and strong laws of large numbers, the central limit theorem, as well as the monotone, dominated, and bounded convergence theorems
· Markov chains with finitely many states
· Random walks on Z, Z2 and Z3
· Arrival processes and Poisson point processes
· Brownian motion, including basic properties of Brownian paths such as continuity but lack of differentiability
· An introductory look at stochastic calculus including a version of Ito’s formula with applications to finance, and a development of the Ornstein-Uhlenbeck process with an application to economics
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Douglas Howard is the coordinator of the bachelor of science major in Financial Mathematics at Baruch College, City University of New York, where he has taught in the mathematics department for nearly twenty years and is on the faculty of the Financial Engineering MS Program. He has almost a decade of Wall Street experience involving the application of probabilistic models to the financial markets.
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