Nicholas Polson

Nicholas Polson (born 7 May 1963) is a British statistician who is a professor of econometrics and statistics at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. His works are primarily in Bayesian statistics, Markov chain Monte Carlo and Sequential Monte Carlo, (aka Particle filter). Polson was educated at Worcester College, Oxford University and the University of Nottingham where his PhD supervisor was Adrian Smith.

Polson is the co-author (with James Scott) of the book AIQ: How People and Machines Are Smarter Together (2018), about the key ideas that played a role in the historical development of artificial intelligence.

Selected publications

  • Eraker, B., M. Johannes and N.G. Polson, "The Impact of Jumps in Volatility in Returns," (2003) Journal of Finance, 58, 3, 1269–1300.
  • Carlin, B.P., N.G. Polson and D.S. Stoffer, "A Monte Carlo Approach to Non-Normal and Non-Linear State Space Modelling" (1992) Journal of the American Statistical Association, 87, 493–500.
gollark: STM32s and ESP32s and such are better. The uno is weak.
gollark: Yes, but the uno is not actually a very good/modern microcontroller.
gollark: Mostly, they all do approximately the same things above a certain price point but have incremental improvements in some areas.
gollark: Anyway, I don't think buying phones above £300 or so unless you really need some specific feature is worth it.
gollark: Why? Their only very special feature is the PIO thing.

References


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