HISTÓRIA |
BIOGRAFIAS |
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Harald Cramér entered the University of
Stockholm in 1912. He embarked on a course of study which involved both
chemistry and mathematics and at first the chemistry seemed to be at
least as important to him as the mathematics. In fact he worked as a
research assistant on a biochemistry project before becoming firmly
settled on research in mathematics. Cramér's first five publications are
written jointly with the chemist H von Euler during 1913-14. After this
he worked on his doctoral studies in mathematics which were supervised
by
Marcel Riesz. Also influenced by
G H Hardy, Cramér's research resulted in the award of a PhD in 1917
for his thesis On a class of
Dirichlet series. It was not only through his work on number theory that Cramér was led towards probability theory. He also had a second job, namely as an actuary with the Svenska Life Assurance Company. This led him to study probability and statistics which then became the main area of his research. In 1927 he published an elementary text in Swedish Probability theory and some of its applications. In 1929 he was appointed to a newly created chair in Stockholm, becoming the first Swedish professor of Actuarial Mathematics and Mathematical Statistics. Cramér became interested in the rigorous mathematical formulation of probability in work of the French and Russian mathematicians such as Paul Lévy, Sergei Bernstein, and Aleksandr Khinchin in the early 1930s, but in particular the axiomatic approach of Kolmogorov. The results of his studies were written up in his Cambridge publication Random variables and probability distributions which appeared in 1937. This was to lead to later work on stationary stochastic processes. By the mid 1930s Cramér's attention had turned to look at the approach of the English and American statisticians such as Fisher, Neyman and Egon Pearson (Karl Pearson's son). These he described as admirable but [10]:-
Masani in [9] describes the beginnings of Cramér's work on stochastic processes as follows:-
During World War II Cramér was to some extent cut off from the rest of the academic world. However he gave shelter to W Feller who was forced out of Germany by Hitler's anti-Jewish policies in 1934. By the end of World War II Cramér had written his masterpiece Mathematical Methods of Statistics. The book was first published in 1945, and republished as recently as 1999. The book combines the two approaches to statistics described above and the latest reprinting is described as follows:-
In 1950 Cramér became the President of Stockholm University. Despite holding this post until he retired in 1961, Cramér still found time to undertake research despite the large administrative burden placed on him. The second phase of Cramér's work on stochastic processes [9]:-
Cramér's Collected Works were published in 1994. Paul Embrechts, in his review of the two volumes, writes:-
Another reviewer writes:-
We should give two specific results which we have not mentioned previously which will be remembered as major contributions, namely his work on the central limit theorem and his beautiful theorem that if the sum of two independent random variables is normal then all are normal. There have been many tributes to Cramér. Edward Phragmen (1863-1937) wrote:-
Blom in [1] sums up Cramér's contribution with simple but effective words:-
(Tradução livre do artigo de: John J. O'Connor e Edmund F. Robertson) |
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REFERÊNCIAS (ARTIGOS) |
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G Blom, Harald Cramér 1893-1985, Ann. Statist. 15 (4) (1987), 1335-1350. G Blom and B Matérn, Bibliography : publications by Harald Cramér, Scand. Actuar. J. (1) (1984), 1-10. H Bohman, Harald Cramér in memoriam, Scand. Actuar. J. (3-4) (1985), 129-130. A Granville, Harald Cramér and the distribution of prime numbers, Harald Cramér Symposium, Stockholm, 1993, Scand. Actuar. J. (1) (1995), 12-28. U Grenander, A survey of the life and works of Harald Cramér, Harald Cramér Symposium, Stockholm, 1993, Scand. Actuar. J. (1) (1995), 2-5. J Jung, In memoriam : Harald Cramér, Mitt. Verein. Schweiz. Versicherungsmath. (2) (1986), 121-122. J F C Kingman, Obituary : Harald Cramér : 1893-1985, J. Roy. Statist. Soc. Ser. A 149 (2) (1986), 186. M R Leadbetter, A view of Harald Cramér : working with the master in his later years, Harald Cramér Symposium, Stockholm, 1993, Scand. Actuar. J. (1) (1995), 6-11. P R Masani, The aftermath of Cramér's work on stochastic processes, Harald Cramér Symposium, Stockholm, 1993, Scand. Actuar. J. (1) (1995), 66-96. E J Wegman, Some personal recollections of Harald Cramér on the development of statistics and probability, Statist. Sci. 1 (4) (1986), 528-535. | |||
REFERÊNCIAS (SÍTIOS) |
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Obituary: Haral Cramér |
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Carl Harald Cramér |
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