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Kiyosi Itô

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Fields
  
Known for
  
Ito calculus

Movies
  
Deadly Outlaw: Rekka

Education
  

Alma mater
  
Role
  
Mathematician

Institutions
  
University of Kyoto

Name
  
Kiyosi Ito

Children
  
Junko Ito

Kiyosi Ito httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
September 7, 1915Hokusei, Mie, Honshu, Japan (
1915-09-07
)

Doctoral students
  
Masatoshi FukushimaTakeyuki HidaShigeo KusuokaMakiko NisioMurali RaoShinzo WatanabeToshio Yamada

Died
  
November 10, 2008, Kyoto, Kyoto Prefecture, Japan

Books
  
Diffusion Processes and Their, Stochastic Processes: Lectures, An Introduction to Probab, Essentials of Stochasti, Foundations of Stochasti

Similar People
  
Henry McKean, Daniel W Stroock, Norbert Wiener, Ole Barndorff‑Nielsen, Kosaku Yosida

Doctoral advisor
  

Kiyosi Itô (伊藤 清, Itō Kiyoshi, September 7, 1915 – 10 November 2008) was a Japanese mathematician. He pioneered the theory of stochastic integration and stochastic differential equations, now known as the Itô calculus. Its basic concept is the Itô integral, and among the most important results is a change of variable formula known as Itô's lemma. Itô calculus is a method used in the mathematical study of random events and is applied in various fields, and is perhaps best known for its use in mathematical finance. Ito also made contributions to the study of diffusion processes on manifolds, known as stochastic differential geometry.

Contents

Kiyosi Itô Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences

Although the standard Hepburn romanization of his name is Kiyoshi Itō, he used the spelling Kiyosi Itô (Kunrei-shiki romanization). The alternative spellings Itoh and Ito are also sometimes seen in the West.

Biography

Kiyosi Itô Kiyoshi It 93 dies Implicit None

Itô was born in Hokusei in Mie Prefecture on the main island of Honshū. He graduated with a B.S. (1938) and a Ph.D (1945) in Mathematics from the University of Tokyo. Between 1938 and 1945, Itô worked for the Japanese National Statistical Bureau, where he published two of his seminal works on probability and stochastic processes. After that he continued to develop his ideas on stochastic analysis with many important papers on the topic.

Kiyosi Itô Biography Dynkin Collection

In 1952, he became a Professor at the University of Kyoto where he remained until his retirement in 1979.

Kiyosi Itô Centennial Anniversary of the Birth of Kiyosi It

Starting in the 1950s, Itô spent long periods of time outside Japan at Cornell, Stanford, the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J. and Aarhus University in Denmark.

Kiyosi Itô Gauss Prize KYOTO UNIVERSITY

Itô was awarded the inaugural Gauss Prize in 2006 by the International Mathematical Union for his lifetime achievements. As he was unable to travel to Madrid, his youngest daughter, Junko Itô received the Gauss Prize from the King of Spain on his behalf. Later, International Mathematics Union (IMU) President Sir John Ball personally presented the medal to Itô at a special ceremony held in Kyoto.

In October 2008, Itô was honored with Japan's Order of Culture; and an awards ceremony for the Order of Culture was held at the Imperial Palace.

Itô wrote in Japanese, Chinese, German, French and English.

Itô died on November 10, 2008 in Kyoto, Japan at age 93.

Scientific works of Kiyosi Itô

  • Kiyosi Ito (1944). "Stochastic integral". Proceedings of the Imperial Academy. 20 (8): 519–524. doi:10.3792/pia/1195572786. 
  • Kiyosi Ito (1946). "On a stochastic integral equation.". Proceedings of the Japan Academy. 22 (2): 32–35. doi:10.3792/pja/1195572371. 
  • Kiyosi Ito (1950). "Stochastic differential equations in a differentiable manifold". Nagoya Mathematical Journal. 1: 35–47. 
  • Kiyosi Ito (1951). "On a formula concerning stochastic differentials". Nagoya Mathematical Journal. 3: 55–65. 
  • Kiyosi Ito and Henry McKean (1974). Diffusion Processes and Their Sample Paths. Berlin: Springer Verlag. ISBN 978-3-540-60629-1. 
  • Kiyosi Ito (1984). Foundations of Stochastic Differential Equations in Infinite Dimensional Spaces. Philadelphia: Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. ISBN 978-0-89871-193-6. 
  • References

    Kiyosi Itô Wikipedia