Background
Cinlar, Erhan was born on May 28, 1941 in Divrigi, Turkey. Son of Ahmet and Vesile Cinlar. came to the United States, 1959.
( This clear presentation of the most fundamental models ...)
This clear presentation of the most fundamental models of random phenomena employs methods that recognize computer-related aspects of theory. The text emphasizes the modern viewpoint, in which the primary concern is the behavior of sample paths. By employing matrix algebra and recursive methods, rather than transform methods, it provides techniques readily adaptable to computing with machines. Topics include probability spaces and random variables, expectations and independence, Bernoulli processes and sums of independent random variables, Poisson processes, Markov chains and processes, and renewal theory. Assuming some background in calculus but none in measure theory, the complete, detailed, and well-written treatment is suitable for engineering students in applied mathematics and operations research courses as well as those in a wide variety of other scientific fields. Many numerical examples, worked out in detail, appear throughout the text, in addition to numerous end-of-chapter exercises and answers to selected exercises.
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Cinlar, Erhan was born on May 28, 1941 in Divrigi, Turkey. Son of Ahmet and Vesile Cinlar. came to the United States, 1959.
Bachelor of Science in Industrial Engineering, Mathematics University of Michigan, 1963; Master of Arts in Mathematics, University of Michigan, 1964; Doctor of Philosophy in Industrial Engineering, University Michigan, 1965.
Assistant professor, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, 1965-1968;
associate professor, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, 1968-1972;
professor, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, 1972-1985;
professor, Princeton (New Jersey) U., since 1985;
board directors program in statistics and operations research, Princeton (New Jersey) U., 1986-1997;
department chairman сivil engineering and operations research, Princeton (New Jersey) U., since 1997. Visiting professor Stanford University, 1971-1972, U. Rennes, 1981, U. Rome, 1983, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, 1992. Chairman Committee for Confs. on Stochastic Processes, 1987-1989.
Consultant Bell laboratories, United States Army, and others.
( This clear presentation of the most fundamental models ...)
Fellow Institute of Mathematics Statistics. Member International Statistical Institute, American Mathematics Society, Bernoulli Society (member council 1983-1987), Society Engineering Science (board directors 1993-1996), Operations Research Society of America.
Married Hazel T. Stewart, 1963 (divorced 1986). Children: Karahan, Suzan, Nuran. Married Anne Lord Witt, 1986.