Peter Gavin Hall

Peter Hall

Professor Peter Gavin Hall, in his office at The University of Melbourne on 13 March 2007
Born Peter Gavin Hall
(1951-11-20)20 November 1951
Sydney
Died 9 January 2016(2016-01-09) (aged 64)
Melbourne
Nationality Australian
Fields Mathematics, statistics
Institutions Australian National University, University of California Davis, University of Melbourne
Alma mater University of Sydney
Australian National University
University of Oxford
Doctoral advisor John Kingman

Peter Gavin Hall AO FAA FRS (20 November 1951 – 9 January 2016) was an Australian researcher in probability theory and mathematical statistics. The American Statistical Association described him as one of the most influential and prolific theoretical statisticians in the history of the field.[1] The School of Mathematics and Statistics Building at The University of Melbourne was renamed the Peter Hall building in his honour on 9 December 2016.[2]

Academic career

Hall was an author in probability and statistics. Mathscinet lists him with 606 publications as of January 2016. Google Scholar lists him with an h-index of 113 as of December 2016. He made contributions to nonparametric statistics, in particular for curve estimation and resampling: the bootstrap method, smoothing, density estimation, and bandwidth selection. He worked on numerous applications across fields of economics, engineering, physical science and biological science. Hall also made contributions to surface roughness measurement using fractals. In probability theory he made many contributions to limit theory, spatial processes and stochastic geometry. His paper "Theoretical comparison of bootstrap confidence intervals" (Annals of Statistics, 1988) has been reprinted in the Breakthroughs in Statistics collection.

Hall earned his Doctorate at the University of Oxford in 1976. He was an ARC Laureate Fellow at the School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Melbourne,[3] and also had a joint appointment at University of California Davis.[4] He previously held a professorship at the Centre for Mathematics and its Applications at the Australian National University. He is an ISI Highly Cited Researcher.[5] He is one of only three researchers based outside of North America to win the prestigious COPSS presidents' Award.

Major Honours and Awards

Published Books

Personal life

Peter Hall was born to radiophysics and radio astronomy pioneer Ruby Payne-Scott and telephone technician William Holman Hall. His younger sister is artistic photographer and sculptor, Fiona Margaret Hall.[20]

Hall was a keen photographer with a special interest in train photography.[1] He enjoyed travel and was a regular visitor to many universities around the world. He died of leukaemia in Melbourne on 9 January 2016. He is survived by his wife, Jeannie.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.