Robert M. Gray (auth.)9781441910899, 1441910891
Highlights
Second edition of classic text
Complete tour of book and guidelines for use given in Introduction, so readers can see at a glance the topics of interest
Structures mathematics for an engineering audience, with emphasis on engineering applications.
New in the Second Edition
Much of the material has been rearranged and revised for pedagogical reasons.
The original first chapter has been split in order to allow a more thorough treatment of basic probability before tackling random processes and dynamical systems.
The final chapter has been broken into two pieces to provide separate emphasis on process metrics and the ergodic decomposition of affine functionals.
Completion of event spaces and probability measures is treated in more detail.
More specific examples of random processes have been introduced.
Many classic inequalities are now incorporated into the text, along with proofs; and many citations have been added.
From the Author’s Preface…
This book has a long history. It began over two decades ago as the first half of a book on information and ergodic theory. The intent was and remains to provide a reasonably self-contained advanced (at least for engineers) treatment of measure theory, probability theory, and random processes, with an emphasis on general alphabets and on ergodic and stationary properties of random processes that might be neither ergodic nor stationary.
The intended audience was mathematically inclined engineers who had not had formal courses in measure theoretic probability or ergodic theory. Much of the material is familiar stuff for mathematicians, but many of the topics and results had not then previously appeared in books. The original project grew too large and the first part contained much that would likely bore mathematicians and discourage them from the second part. Hence I finally followed a suggestion to separate the material and split the project in two. The resulting manuscript fills a unique hole in the literature. Personal experience indicates that the intended audience rarely has the time to take a complete course in measure and probability theory in a mathematics or statistics department, at least not before they need some of the material in their research.
I intended in this book to provide a catalogue of many results that I have found need of in my own research together with proofs that I could follow. I also intended to clarify various connections that I had found confusing or insufficiently treated in my own reading. If the book provides similar service for others, it will have succeeded.
Table of contents :
Front Matter….Pages 1-31
Probability Spaces….Pages 1-33
Random Processes and Dynamical Systems….Pages 35-59
Standard Alphabets….Pages 61-93
Standard Borel Spaces….Pages 95-113
Averages….Pages 115-155
Conditional Probability and Expectation….Pages 157-194
Ergodic Properties….Pages 195-238
Ergodic Theorems….Pages 239-262
Process Approximation and Metrics….Pages 263-294
The Ergodic Decomposition….Pages 295-310
Back Matter….Pages 1-11
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.