Institute of Mathematical Statistics

The Institute of Mathematical Statistics is an international professional and scholarly society devoted to the development, dissemination, and application of statistics and probability. The Institute currently has about 4,000 members in all parts of the world. Beginning in 2005, the institute started offering joint membership with the Bernoulli Society for Mathematical Statistics and Probability as well as with the International Statistical Institute. The Institute was founded in 1935 with Harry C. Carver and Henry L. Rietz as its two most important supporters. The institute publishes a variety of journals, and holds several international conference every year.

Publications

The Institute publishes five journals:

In addition, it co-sponsors:

There are also some affiliated journals:

  • Probability and Mathematical Statistics (Wrocław University of Technology)
  • Latin American Journal of Probability and Mathematical Statistics

Furthermore, five journals are supported by the IMS:

Fellows

The IMS selects an annual class of Fellows who have demonstrated distinction in research or leadership in statistics or probability.[1]

Meetings

Meetings gives scholars and practitioners a platform to present research results, disseminate job opportunities and exchange ideas with each other. The IMS holds an annual meeting called Joint Statistical Meetings (JSM) [2], and sponsors multiple international meetings, for example, Spring Research Conference (SRC) [3].

gollark: While GPU good and all, they can only do some cryptocurrencies usefully, and I think most AI people are not buying compute on random single nodes at home.
gollark: You need ASICs to get a noticeable amount of Bitcoin, and it probably isn't very free because you have in fact spent money on the components of this.
gollark: Instead of heating it with resistors, you should heat it with outdated and extremely power-hungry rack servers.
gollark: It would be far more "based" to heat your water with radioisotopes.
gollark: Never mind, there is apparently a setting for it, just a non-obvious one.

See also

References

  1. "Nominations for IMS Fellow". Retrieved 9 Sep 2019.
  2. "JSM 2020". American Statistical Association. 2020. Retrieved 2020-02-24.
  3. "SRC 2020". American Statistical Association. 2020. Retrieved 2020-02-24.
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