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The series is devoted to the publication of monographs and
high-level textbooks in mathematics, mathematical methods and their
applications. Apart from covering important areas of current
interest, a major aim is to make topics of an interdisciplinary
nature accessible to the non-specialist. The works in this series
are addressed to advanced students and researchers in mathematics
and theoretical physics. In addition, it can serve as a guide for
lectures and seminars on a graduate level. The series de Gruyter
Studies in Mathematics was founded ca. 35 years ago by the late
Professor Heinz Bauer and Professor Peter Gabriel with the aim to
establish a series of monographs and textbooks of high standard,
written by scholars with an international reputation presenting
current fields of research in pure and applied mathematics. While
the editorial board of the Studies has changed with the years, the
aspirations of the Studies are unchanged. In times of rapid growth
of mathematical knowledge carefully written monographs and
textbooks written by experts are needed more than ever, not least
to pave the way for the next generation of mathematicians. In this
sense the editorial board and the publisher of the Studies are
devoted to continue the Studies as a service to the mathematical
community. Please submit any book proposals to Niels Jacob.
Adaptive systems are widely encountered in many applications
ranging through adaptive filtering and more generally adaptive
signal processing, systems identification and adaptive control, to
pattern recognition and machine intelligence: adaptation is now
recognised as keystone of "intelligence" within computerised
systems. These diverse areas echo the classes of models which
conveniently describe each corresponding system. Thus although
there can hardly be a "general theory of adaptive systems"
encompassing both the modelling task and the design of the
adaptation procedure, nevertheless, these diverse issues have a
major common component: namely the use of adaptive algorithms, also
known as stochastic approximations in the mathematical statistics
literature, that is to say the adaptation procedure (once all
modelling problems have been resolved). The juxtaposition of these
two expressions in the title reflects the ambition of the authors
to produce a reference work, both for engineers who use these
adaptive algorithms and for probabilists or statisticians who would
like to study stochastic approximations in terms of problems
arising from real applications. Hence the book is organised in two
parts, the first one user-oriented, and the second providing the
mathematical foundations to support the practice described in the
first part. The book covers the topcis of convergence, convergence
rate, permanent adaptation and tracking, change detection, and is
illustrated by various realistic applications originating from
these areas of applications.
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