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โœฆ   LIBER   โœฆ

[Lecture Notes in Statistics] Space, Structure and Randomness Volume 183 || Random Structures in Physics

โœ Scribed by Bilodeau, Michel; Meyer, Fernand; Schmitt, Michel


Book ID
120411341
Publisher
Springer New York
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
622 KB
Edition
4
Category
Article
ISBN
0387291156

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โœฆ Synopsis


Space, structure, and randomness: these are the three key concepts underlying Georges Matheronโ€™s scientific work. He first encountered them at the beginning of his career when working as a mining engineer, and then they resurfaced in fields ranging from meteorology to microscopy. What could these radically different types of applications possibly have in common? First, in each one only a single realisation of the phenomenon is available for study, but its features repeat themselves in space; second, the sampling pattern is rarely regular, and finally there are problems of change of scale. This volume is divided in three sections on random sets, geostatistics and mathematical morphology. They reflect his professional interests and his search for underlying unity. Some readers may be surprised to find theoretical chapters mixed with applied ones. We have done this deliberately. GM always considered that the distinction between the theory and practice was purely academic. When GM tackled practical problems, he used his skill as a physicist to extract the salient features and to select variables which could be measured meaningfully and whose values could be estimated from the available data. Then he used his outstanding ability as a mathematician to solve the problems neatly and efficiently. It was his capacity to combine a physicistโ€™s intuition with a mathematicianโ€™s analytical skills that allowed him to produce new and innovative solutions to difficult problems. The book should appeal to graduate students and researchers working in mathematics, probability, statistics, physics, spatial data analysis, and image analysis. In addition it will be of interest to those who enjoy discovering links between scientific disciplines that seem unrelated at first glance. In writing the book the contributors have tried to put GMโ€™s ideas into perspective. During his working life, GM was a genuinely creative scientist. He developed innovative concepts whose usefulness goes far beyond the confines of the discipline for which they were originally designed. This is why his work remains as pertinent today as it was when it was first written.


๐Ÿ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


[Lecture Notes in Statistics] Space, Str
โœ Bilodeau, Michel; Meyer, Fernand; Schmitt, Michel ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 2005 ๐Ÿ› Springer New York ๐ŸŒ English โš– 441 KB

Space, structure, and randomness: these are the three key concepts underlying Georges Matheronโ€™s scientific work. He first encountered them at the beginning of his career when working as a mining engineer, and then they resurfaced in fields ranging from meteorology to microscopy. What could these ra