Haya Kaspi

Haya Kaspi (born 6 October 1948)[1] is an Israeli operations researcher, statistician, and probability theorist. She is a professor emeritus of industrial engineering and management at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology.

Education and career

Kaspi was born in HaOgen. She earned a bachelor's degree in mathematics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1971, and a master's degree in applied mathematics at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology in 1974.[1] Next, she went to the US for her doctoral studies, completing a Ph.D. in operations research at Cornell University in 1979. Her dissertation, Ladder Sets of Markov Additive Processes, was supervised by N. U. Prabhu.[2]

After postdoctoral study at Princeton University, she returned to the Technion in 1980 as a lecturer. She was promoted to full professor in 1997.[1]

Recognition

In 2008, Kaspi was selected as a Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics "for contributions to the general theory of Markov processes and its applications, to the theory of Markov local time; and for excellence in teaching and editorial work".[3] In 2011, Kaspi and Nathalie Eisenbaum shared the Itô Prize of the Bernoulli Society for Mathematical Statistics and Probability for their joint work on permanental point processes (processes whose joint intensity can be represented as a permanent).[4]

gollark: datetime_manipulation_irl
gollark: Same principle.
gollark: You are very quick to jump to "evil racists are trying to say things over every conceivable communication channel".
gollark: Something something principle of charity.
gollark: oh no, imagine things ending up randomly being sold below the average price?

References

  1. Curriculum vitae, 2014, retrieved 2019-09-11
  2. Haya Kaspi at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. 2008 IMS Fellows Named, Institute of Mathematical Statistics, 25 June 2008, retrieved 2019-09-11
  4. "Eisenbaum and Kaspi Awarded Itô Prize" (PDF), Mathematics People, Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 58 (10): 1464, November 2011
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