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The pioneering research of Hirotugu Akaike has an international
reputation for profoundly affecting how data and time series are
analyzed and modelled and is highly regarded by the statistical and
technological communities of Japan and the world. His 1974 paper "A
new look at the statistical model identification" (IEEE Trans
Automatic Control, AC-19, 716-723) is one of the most frequently
cited papers in the area of engineering, technology, and applied
sciences (according to a 1981 Citation Classic of the Institute of
Scientific Information). It introduced the broad scientific
community to model identification using the methods of Akaike's
criterion AIC. The AIC method is cited and applied in almost every
area of physical and social science. The best way to learn about
the seminal ideas of pioneering researchers is to read their
original papers. This book reprints 29 papers of Akaike's more than
140 papers. This book of papers by Akaike is a tribute to his
outstanding career and a service to provide students and
researchers with access to Akaike's innovative and influential
ideas and applications. To provide a commentary on the career of
Akaike, the motivations of his ideas, and his many remarkable
honors and prizes, this book reprints "A Conversation with Hirotugu
Akaike" by David F. Findley and Emanuel Parzen, published in 1995
in the journal Statistical Science. This survey of Akaike's career
provides each of us with a role model for how to have an impact on
society by stimulating applied researchers to implement new
statistical methods.
The pioneering research of Hirotugu Akaike has an international
reputation for profoundly affecting how data and time series are
analyzed and modelled and is highly regarded by the statistical and
technological communities of Japan and the world. His 1974 paper "A
new look at the statistical model identification" (IEEE Trans
Automatic Control, AC-19, 716-723) is one of the most frequently
cited papers in the area of engineering, technology, and applied
sciences (according to a 1981 Citation Classic of the Institute of
Scientific Information). It introduced the broad scientific
community to model identification using the methods of Akaike's
criterion AIC. The AIC method is cited and applied in almost every
area of physical and social science. The best way to learn about
the seminal ideas of pioneering researchers is to read their
original papers. This book reprints 29 papers of Akaike's more than
140 papers. This book of papers by Akaike is a tribute to his
outstanding career and a service to provide students and
researchers with access to Akaike's innovative and influential
ideas and applications. To provide a commentary on the career of
Akaike, the motivations of his ideas, and his many remarkable
honors and prizes, this book reprints "A Conversation with Hirotugu
Akaike" by David F. Findley and Emanuel Parzen, published in 1995
in the journal Statistical Science. This survey of Akaike's career
provides each of us with a role model for how to have an impact on
society by stimulating applied researchers to implement new
statistical methods.
This IMA Volume in Mathematics and its Applications NEW DIRECTIONS
IN TIME SERIES ANALYSIS, PART II is based on the proceedings of the
IMA summer program "New Directions in Time Series Analysis. " We
are grateful to David Brillinger, Peter Caines, John Geweke,
Emanuel Parzen, Murray Rosenblatt, and Murad Taqqu for organizing
the program and we hope that the remarkable excitement and
enthusiasm of the participants in this interdisciplinary effort are
communicated to the reader. A vner Friedman Willard Miller, Jr.
PREFACE Time Series Analysis is truly an interdisciplinary field
because development of its theory and methods requires interaction
between the diverse disciplines in which it is applied. To harness
its great potential, strong interaction must be encouraged among
the diverse community of statisticians and other scientists whose
research involves the analysis of time series data. This was the
goal of the IMA Workshop on "New Directions in Time Series
Analysis. " The workshop was held July 2-July 27, 1990 and was
organized by a committee consisting of Emanuel Parzen (chair),
David Brillinger, Murray Rosenblatt, Murad S. Taqqu, John Geweke,
and Peter Caines. Constant guidance and encouragement was provided
by Avner Friedman, Director of the IMA, and his very helpful and
efficient staff. The workshops were organized by weeks. It may be
of interest to record the themes that were announced in the IMA
newsletter describing the workshop: l.
Part of a two volume set based on a recent IMA program of the same
name. The goal of the program and these books is to develop a
community of statistical and other scientists kept up-to-date on
developments in this quickly evolving and interdisciplinary field.
Consequently, these books present recent material by distinguished
researchers. Topics discussed in Part I include nonlinear and non-
Gaussian models and processes (higher order moments and spectra,
nonlinear systems, applications in astronomy, geophysics,
engineering, and simulation) and the interaction of time series
analysis and statistics (information model identification,
categorical valued time series, nonparametric and semiparametric
methods). Self-similar processes and long-range dependence (time
series with long memory, fractals, 1/f noise, stable noise) and
time series research common to engineers and economists (modeling
of multivariate and possibly non-stationary time series, state
space and adaptive methods) are discussed in Part II.
Columbia University, Project Michael, Technical Report Number 33.
Research Sponsored By The Office Of Naval Research.
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