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There is a great deal of research into wave propagation in random
media, in such fields as applied mathematics, acoustics, optics,
materials science, atomic physics and geophysics. This book
provides theoretical and practical introductions at research level
to topics such as localization of waves, band gap materials, random
matrices, dielectric media, laser cooled atoms, wave scattering
from rough surfaces, randomly layered media, seismic waves and
imaging the earth.
The content of this book is multidisciplinary by nature. It uses
mathematical tools from the theories of probability and stochastic
processes, partial differential equations, and asymptotic analysis,
combined with the physics of wave propagation and modeling of time
reversal experiments. It is addressed to a wide audience of
graduate students and researchers interested in the intriguing
phenomena related to waves propagating in random media. At the end
of each chapter there is a section of notes where the authors give
references and additional comments on the various results presented
in the chapter.
The past decade has witnessed a considerable upsurge of clinical
and research interest in the problems of developmentally and
physically the fields of psychology, disabled persons. Indeed,
professionals from special education, rehabilitation, psychiatry,
and social work have all directed attention to the development and
implementation of evaluation and remedial programs. The heightened
activity in this area is in part a result of early assessment
research with these popUlations, which provided preliminary
evidence of difficulties in social and emotional adjustment in many
disabled individuals. In response to these findings, many
intervention efforts have been implemented to deal with these
issues and improve the life situation of the disabled. Also, there
were indications that developmentally and physically disabled
children often were deprived of adequate educations. As a result,
legal and legislative initiatives have been enacted in recent years
to make public education available to all students irrespective of
disability. Central to all therapeutic and psychoeducational
endeavors with the disabled is psychological evaluation. Only
through careful and com prehensive psychological evaluation can
areas of deficit as well as strengths be identified. Once treatment
targets and goals have been ascertained, psychological evaluation
is needed to determine the efficacy of intervention strategies.
However, the field of psychological evalua tion, in general, and
with disabled persons, in particular, has become highly
specialized. This is largely a function of the changing roles of
psychological evaluators."
The past decade has witnessed a considerable upsurge of clinical
and research interest in the problems of developmentally and
physically the fields of psychology, disabled persons. Indeed,
professionals from special education, rehabilitation, psychiatry,
and social work have all directed attention to the development and
implementation of evaluation and remedial programs. The heightened
activity in this area is in part a result of early assessment
research with these popUlations, which provided preliminary
evidence of difficulties in social and emotional adjustment in many
disabled individuals. In response to these findings, many
intervention efforts have been implemented to deal with these
issues and improve the life situation of the disabled. Also, there
were indications that developmentally and physically disabled
children often were deprived of adequate educations. As a result,
legal and legislative initiatives have been enacted in recent years
to make public education available to all students irrespective of
disability. Central to all therapeutic and psychoeducational
endeavors with the disabled is psychological evaluation. Only
through careful and com prehensive psychological evaluation can
areas of deficit as well as strengths be identified. Once treatment
targets and goals have been ascertained, psychological evaluation
is needed to determine the efficacy of intervention strategies.
However, the field of psychological evalua tion, in general, and
with disabled persons, in particular, has become highly
specialized. This is largely a function of the changing roles of
psychological evaluators."
The content of this book is multidisciplinary by nature. It uses
mathematical tools from the theories of probability and stochastic
processes, partial differential equations, and asymptotic analysis,
combined with the physics of wave propagation and modeling of time
reversal experiments. It is addressed to a wide audience of
graduate students and researchers interested in the intriguing
phenomena related to waves propagating in random media. At the end
of each chapter there is a section of notes where the authors give
references and additional comments on the various results presented
in the chapter.
The NATO Advanced Study Institute on Diffuse Waves in Complex Media
was held at the "Centre de Physique des Houches" in France from
March 17 to 27, 1998. The Schools' scientific content, wave
propagation in heterogeneous me dia, has covered many areas of
fundamental and applied research. On the one hand, the
understanding of wave propagation has considerably improved during
the last thirty years. New developments and concepts such as,
speckle correlations, weak and strong localization, time reversal,
near-field propagation are under active research. On the other
hand, wave propagation in random media is now being investigated in
many different fields such as applied mathematics, acoustics,
optics, atomic physics, geo physics or medical sciences. Each
community often uses its own langage to describe the same
phenomena. The aim of the School was to gather worldwide
specialists to illuminate various aspects of wave propagation in
random media. This volume presents fourteen expository articles
corresponding to courses and seminars given during the School. They
are arranged as follows. The first three articles deal with the
phenomena of localization of waves: B. van Tiggelen (p. 1) gives a
critical review of the physics of localization, J. Lacroix (p. 61)
presents the mathematical theory and A. Klein (p. 73) describes
recent results for randomized periodic media."
Building upon the ideas introduced in their previous book,
Derivatives in Financial Markets with Stochastic Volatility, the
authors study the pricing and hedging of financial derivatives
under stochastic volatility in equity, interest-rate, and credit
markets. They present and analyze multiscale stochastic volatility
models and asymptotic approximations. These can be used in equity
markets, for instance, to link the prices of path-dependent exotic
instruments to market implied volatilities. The methods are also
used for interest rate and credit derivatives. Other applications
considered include variance-reduction techniques, portfolio
optimization, forward-looking estimation of CAPM 'beta', and the
Heston model and generalizations of it. 'Off-the-shelf' formulas
and calibration tools are provided to ease the transition for
practitioners who adopt this new method. The attention to detail
and explicit presentation make this also an excellent text for a
graduate course in financial and applied mathematics.
This important work addresses problems in financial mathematics of pricing and hedging derivative securities in an environment of uncertain and changing market volatility. These problems are important to investors from large trading institutions to pension funds. The authors present mathematical and statistical tools that exploit the volatile nature of the market. The mathematics is introduced through examples and illustrated with simulations and the modeling approach that is described is validated and tested on market data. The material is suitable for a one-semester course for graduate students with some exposure to methods of stochastic modeling and arbitrage pricing theory in finance. The volume is easily accessible to derivatives practitioners in the financial engineering industry.
The main theme of this volume is credit risk and credit
derivatives. Recent developments in financial markets show that
appropriate modeling and quantification of credit risk is
fundamental in the context of modern complex structured financial
products. The reader will find several points of view on credit
risk when looked at from the perspective of Econometrics and
Financial Mathematics. The volume consists of eleven contributions
by both practitioners and theoreticians with expertise in financial
markets, in general, and econometrics and mathematical finance in
particular. The challenge of modeling defaults and their
correlations is addressed, and new results on copula, reduced form
and structural models, and the top-down approach are presented.
After the so-called subprime crisis that hit global markets in the
summer of 2007, the volume is very timely and will be useful to
researchers in the area of credit risk.
The Handbook on Systemic Risk, written by experts in the field,
provides researchers with an introduction to the multifaceted
aspects of systemic risks facing the global financial markets. The
Handbook explores the multidisciplinary approaches to analyzing
this risk, the data requirements for further research, and the
recommendations being made to avert financial crisis. The Handbook
is designed to encourage new researchers to investigate a topic
with immense societal implications as well as to provide, for those
already actively involved within their own academic discipline, an
introduction to the research being undertaken in other disciplines.
Each chapter in the Handbook will provide researchers with a
superior introduction to the field and with references to more
advanced research articles. It is the hope of the editors that this
Handbook will stimulate greater interdisciplinary academic research
on the critically important topic of systemic risk in the global
financial markets.
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