Fall semester, 2005
In the first we shall treat the general theory of random (mainly Gaussian) processes on quite arbitrary parameter spaces: e.g. high dimensional Euclidean space, general metric spaces, and manifolds. Most of this theory (e.g. continuity and boundedness issues) is independent on the geometry of the parameter space.
In the second part we shall treat various geometric problems related to random fields. Much of this
(e.g. global behaviour) is geometry specific, and makes for a nice blend of Probability and Geometry.
If you are primarily a statistician, but want to also understand the stochastic processes background to topics like empirical measures (essentially histograms for multivariate or other non-ordered data) or to understand the basis for many (Kolmogorov-Smirnov like) statistical tests, then this course may suite you.
If you are interested in geometry (esp. integral or differential) then
you should find here an interesting application of geometry in a random
setting that is quite different to the usual deterministic one.
The following outline is not cast in stone: I will probably change it depending on who takes the course and what we turn out to be interested in, but it should give you an idea of where I am heading.
| Weeks | Topic |
|---|---|
| 1 | Gaussian processes. The Brownian family of processes |
| 2 | Borell and Slepian inequalities and their variations. Isoperimetric inequalties. |
| 3 | Zero-one laws for Gaussian processes. Karhunen-Loeve expansions. |
| 4-5 | Majorising measures, entropy and boundedness/continuity. |
| 6-7 | Suprema distributions, Tube formulae. |
| 8-9 | Generalised Rice formulae for Gaussian processes from R^d to R^d. Number of critical points, etc. |
| 10-11 | Global geometrical structure of Gaussian processes, including excursions into Integral Geometry and Differential Topology. ( Not assumed prerequisites.) |
| 12 | Back to tube formulae. |
| 13-14 | Real valued Gaussian and non-Gaussian processes on differentiable manifolds. |
If you want extra information, you can reach me in the office at 8294503, at home at 8251794 (but not Shabbatot or Hagei Yisrael), or, most reliably, at robert@ieadler.technion.ac.il.
If you are reading this in hard copy rather than on the web, go to the Teaching section of my homepage at ie.technion.ac.il/Adler.phtml to get the hyperlinks.