Description
This book is about measure theory and filtering. It is meant for graduate engineers, mathematicians, and those working in quantitative finance. It introduces measure theory, stochastic calculus, and stochastic processes. It then provides an accessible introduction to filtering theory, with a focus on the Kalman filter. It includes exercises. The book then provides an excellent users' guide to filtering with applications to finance, genetics, and population modeling.
The estimation of noisily observed states from a sequence of data has traditionally incorporated ideas from Hilbert spaces and calculus-based probability theory. As conditional expectation is the key concept, the correct setting for filtering theory is that of a probability space. Graduate engineers, mathematicians and those working in quantitative finance wishing to use filtering techniques will find in the first half of this book an accessible introduction to measure theory, stochastic calculus, and stochastic processes, with particular emphasis on martingales and Brownian motion. Exercises are included. The book then provides an excellent users' guide to filtering: basic theory is followed by a thorough treatment of Kalman filtering, including recent results which extend the Kalman filter to provide parameter estimates. These ideas are then applied to problems arising in finance, genetics and population modelling in three separate chapters, making this a comprehensive resource for both practitioners and researchers. Review: Review of the hardback: '... useful to those students and scientists in signal processing, mathematical finance and genetics, wishing to incorporate measure-theoretic probability techniques into their predictions. It is also an excellent user's guide to filtering with interesting applications arising in difference arenas.' Journal of Applied Statistics