- Joseph Leo Doob
Infobox Scientist
name = Joseph Doob
image_width = 300px
caption = Joseph Leo Doob
birth_date = birth date|1910|2|27|mf=y
birth_place =Cincinnati ,Ohio , U.S.
residence =
nationality =
death_date = death date and age|2004|6|7|1910|2|27|mf=y
death_place =Urbana ,Illinois , U.S.
field =Mathematician
work_institution =University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
alma_mater =Harvard University
doctoral_advisor = Joseph Walsh
doctoral_students =Paul Halmos David Blackwell
known_for =Doob martingale
prizes =
footnotes =Joseph Leo Doob (
February 27 ,1910 -June 7 ,2004 ) was an Americanmathematician , specializing in analysis andprobability theory.The theory of martingales was developed by Doob.
Early life and education
Doob was born in
Cincinnati, Ohio ,February 27 ,1910 , the son of Leo Doob and Mollie Doerfler Doob. The family moved toNew York City before he was three years old. The parents felt that he was "under-achieving" in grade school and placed him in theEthical Culture School , from which he graduated in 1926. He then went on to Harvard where he received a BA in 1930, an MA in 1931, and a PhD in 1932. After postdoctoral research at Columbia and Princeton, he joined the Department of Mathematics of the University of Illinois in 1935 and served until his retirement in 1978. He was a member of the Urbana campus's Center for Advanced Study from its beginning in 1959. During the Second World War, he worked in Washington, D. C. and Guam as a civilian consultant to the Navy.Work
Doob's thesis was on boundary values of analytic functions. He published two papers based on this thesis, which appeared in 1932 and 1933 in the Transactions of the AMS. Doob returned to this subject many years later when he proved a probabilistic version of Fatou's boundary limit theorem for harmonic functions.
The
Great Depression of 1929 was still going strong in the thirties and Doob could not find a job.B.O. Koopman at Columbia University suggested that statisticianHarold Hotelling might have a grant that would permit Doob to work with him. Hotelling did, so the Depression led Doob to probability.In 1933 Kolmogorov provided the first axiomatic foundation for the theory of probability. Thus a subject that had originated from intuitive ideas suggested by real life experiences and studied informally, suddenly became mathematics. Probability theory became
measure theory with its own problems and terminology. Doob recognized that this would make it possible to give rigorous proofs for existing probability results, and he felt that the tools of measure theory would lead to new probability results.Doob's approach to probability was evident in his first probability paper [J.L. Doob "Probability and statistics"] , in which he proved theorems related to the
law of large numbers , using a probabilistic interpretation ofBirkhoff's ergodic theorem . Then he used these theorems to give rigorous proofs of theorems proven by Fisher and Hotelling related to Fisher'smaximum likelihood estimator for estimating a parameter of a distribution.After writing a series of papers on the foundations of probability and stochastic processes including martingales,
Markov process es, andstationary process es, Doob realized that there was a real need for a book showing what is known about the various types ofstochastic process es. So he wrote his famous "Stochastic Processes" book [Doob J.L., "Stochastic Processes"] . It was published in 1953 and soon became one of the most influential books in the development of modern probability theory.Beyond this book, Doob is best known for his work on martingales and probabilistic
potential theory . After he retired, Doob wrote a book of over 800 pages: "Classical Potential Theory and Its Probabilistic Counterpart" [ Doob J.L., "Classical Potential Theory and Its Probabilistic Counterpart" ] . The first half of this book deals with classical potential theory and the second half withprobability theory , especially martingale theory. In writing this book, Doob shows that his two favorite subjects: martingales and potential theory can be studied by the same mathematical tools.The
American Mathematical Society 's Joseph L. Doob Prize, endowed in 2005 and awarded every three years for an outstanding mathematical book, is named in Doob's honor. [ [http://www.ams.org/prizes/doob-prize.html Joseph L. Doob Prize.]American Mathematical Society . AccessedSeptember 1 ,2008 ]Honors
* President of the
Institute of Mathematical Statistics in 1950.
* President of theAmerican Mathematical Society 1963-1964.
* Elected toAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences 1965.
* Associate of theFrench Academy of Sciences 1975.
* Awarded theNational Medal of Science by thePresident of the United States Jimmy Carter 1979.
* Awarded theSteele Prize by the American Mathematical Society. 1984.ee also
*
Martingale (probability theory)
*Doob martingale
*Doob's martingale convergence theorems
*Doob's martingale inequality
*Doob-Meyer decomposition theorem Notes
References
*cite journal
author = J.L. Doob
year = 1934
month =
title = Probability and statistics
journal =Transactions of the American Mathematical Society
volume = 36
issue =
pages = 759--775
doi = 10.2307/1989822
id =
url =
format =
accessdate =
*cite book
last = Doob
first = Joseph Leo
title = Stochastic Processes
publisher =John Wiley & Sons
location =
year = 1953
id = ISBN 0-471-52369-0
*cite book
last = Doob
first = Joseph Leo
title = Classical Potential Theory and Its Probabilistic Counterpart
publisher =Springer-Verlag
location = Berlin Heidelberg New York
year = 1984
id = ISBN 3-540-41206-9External links
* [http://www.dartmouth.edu/~chance/Doob/conversation.html A Conversation with Joe Doob]
* [http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Doob.html Doob biography]
* [http://www.math.uiuc.edu/People/doob_record.html Record of the Celebration of the Life of Joseph Leo Doob]Selected articles by Doob
* [http://archive.numdam.org/article/BSMF_1957__85__431_0.pdf Conditional brownian motion and the boundary limits of harmonic functions] , "Bulletin de la Société Mathématique de France", 85 (1957), p. 431-458.
* [http://archive.numdam.org/article/AIF_1959__9__293_0.pdf A non probabilistic proof of the relative Fatou theorem] , "Annales de l'institut Fourier", 9 (1959), p. 293-300.
* [http://archive.numdam.org/article/AIF_1962__12__573_0.pdf Boundary properties of functions with finite Dirichlet integrals] , "Annales de l'institut Fourier", 12 (1962), p. 573-621.
* [http://archive.numdam.org/article/AIF_1963__13_2_395_0.pdf Limites angulaires et limites fines] , "Annales de l'institut Fourier", 13 no. 2 (1963), p. 395-415.
* [http://archive.numdam.org/article/AIF_1965__15_1_113_0.pdf Some classical function theory theorems and their modern versions] , "Annales de l'institut Fourier", 15 no. 1 (1965), p. 113-135.
* [http://archive.numdam.org/article/AIF_1967__17_1_469_0.pdf Erratum : “Some classical function theory theorems and their modern versions”] "Annales de l'institut Fourier", 17 no. 1 (1967), p. 469-469.
* [http://archive.numdam.org/article/AIF_1973__23_3_187_0.pdf Boundary approach filters for analytic functions] , "Annales de l'institut Fourier", 23 no. 3 (1973), p. 187-213.
* [http://archive.numdam.org/article/AIF_1975__25_3-4_163_0.pdf Stochastic process measurability conditions] , "Annales de l'institut Fourier", 25 no. 3-4 (1975), p. 163-176. Persondata
NAME= Doob, Joseph Leo
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION= Americanmathematician
DATE OF BIRTH=February 27 ,1910
PLACE OF BIRTH=Cincinnati ,Ohio , U.S.
DATE OF DEATH=June 7 ,2004
PLACE OF DEATH=Urbana ,Illinois , U.S.
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