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Arthur P. Dempster

Arthur Pentland Dempster (born 1929) is a Professor Emeritus in the Harvard University Department of Statistics. He was one of four faculty when the department was founded in 1957.[3]

Arthur P. Dempster

1929 (age 94–95)

Princeton University (PhD 1956)
University of Toronto (BA 1952; MA 1953)

Putnam Fellow (1951)
ASA Fellow (1964) [1]
IMS Fellow (1963) [2]
Guggenheim Fellow
AAAS Fellow (1997)

The two-sample multivariate problem in the degenerate case  (1956)

Biography[edit]

Dempster received his B.A. in mathematics and physics (1952) and M.A. in mathematics (1953), both from the University of Toronto. He obtained his Ph.D. in mathematical statistics from Princeton University in 1956. His thesis, titled The two-sample multivariate problem in the degenerate case, was written under the supervision of John Tukey.

Academic works[edit]

Among his contributions to statistics are the Dempster–Shafer theory and the expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm.

Dempster, A. P. (1967), "Upper and lower probabilities induced by a multivalued mapping", , 38 (2): 325–339, doi:10.1214/aoms/1177698950

The Annals of Mathematical Statistics

Dempster, A. P.; Laird, N.; Rubin, D. B. (1977), "Maximum likelihood from incomplete data via the EM algorithm", , 39 (1): 1–38, JSTOR 2984875

Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series B

Honors and awards[edit]

Dempster was a Putnam Fellow in 1951.[4] He was elected as an American Statistical Association Fellow in 1964,[1] an Institute of Mathematical Statistics Fellow in 1963,[2] and an American Academy of Arts and Sciences Fellow in 1997.[5]

at the Mathematics Genealogy Project

Arthur P. Dempster

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