Boris Levit
Boris Ya. Levit | |
---|---|
Residence | Canada |
Nationality | Russian |
Fields |
Mathematics Statistics |
Institutions | Queen's University |
Alma mater |
Moscow State University Russian Academy of Science |
Doctoral advisor | Rafail Khasminskii |
Boris Ya. Levit is a professor of statistics at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario.
Career
Levit obtained his M.Sc. in Mathematics from Moscow State University and his Ph.D. in Statistics from Russian Academy of Science in 1975 (his advisor was Rafail Khasminskii).[1] While at Moscow State University, he was influenced by many famous mathematicians of the era, including Andrei Kolmogorov.
Before undertaking a professorship at Queen's University, Levit spent several years lecturing in the United States. He has also spent nearly ten years in the Netherlands, as a professor of statistics at the University of Utrecht.
Well-known internationally, Levit has made outstanding contributions to the field of statistics. His research has included statistical problems involving infinitely many parameters, as well as nonparametric statistics. In the 1980s, he discovered how to characterize high order approximation problems using the properties of corresponding elliptic differential operators. Levit was awarded a D.Sc. by Vilnius University for his use of differential geometry and partial differential equations in statistical research.
References
- ↑ "Boris Ya. Levit at the Mathematics Genealogy Project". 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-11.