Gwilym Jenkins
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Gwilym Meirion Jenkins (1933 – July 10, 1982) was a British statistician. His most notable contribution was pioneering work with George Box on autoregressive moving average models, also called Box-Jenkins models, in time-series analysis.
He earned a first class honors degree in Mathematics in 1953 followed by a Ph.D. at University College London in 1956. After graduating, he married the former Margaret Bellingham and raised three children. His first job out of school was junior fellow at the Royal Aircraft Establishment. He followed this by a series of visiting lecturer and professor positions at Imperial College London, Stanford University, Princeton University, and the University of Wisconsin, before settling in as a professor of Systems Engineering at Lancaster University in 1965. His initial work concerned discrete time domain models for Chemical Engineering applications.
While at Lancaster, he founded and became managing director of ISCOL (International Systems Corporation Of Lancaster). He remained in academia until 1974, when he left to start his own consulting company.
He served on the Research Section Committee and Council of the Royal Statistical Society in the 1960s, founded the Journal of Systems Engineering in 1969, and briefly carried out public duties with the Royal Treasury in the mid-1970s. He was elected to the Institute of Mathematical Statistics and the Institute of Statisticians.
He succumbed to Hodgkin's lymphoma in 1982.
[edit] Books by G. M. Jenkins
- Spectral analysis and its applications (with D. G. Watts) 1968
- Time Series Analysis: Forecasting and Control (with G. E. P. Box) 1970
- Practical experience with modelling and forecasting time series 1979
- Case studies in time series analysis (with G. McLeod) 1983
[edit] Obituary
- G. E. P. Box (1983) G. M. Jenkins, 1933-1982 Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A (General), Vol. 146, No. 2, pp. 205-206.
[edit] External links
- George Box's Interview for the International Journal of Forecasting
- Mathematics Genealogy Project: G. M. Jenkins