Nationality Indian Fields Mathematical statistics Role Statistician | Name Raghu Bahadur Academic advisor Herbert Robbins | |
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Born 30 April 1924New Delhi, India ( 1924-04-30 ) Alma mater Delhi UniversityUniversity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Known for Bahadur efficiencyAnderson–Bahadur algorithmBahadur-Ghosh-Kiefer representation Died June 7, 1997, Chicago, Illinois, United States Books Some Limit Theorems in Statistics, R.R. Bahadur's Lectures on the Theory of Estimation Education University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (1950), University of Delhi Awards Guggenheim Fellowship for Natural Sciences, US & Canada | ||
Institutions University of Chicago Similar Raj Chandra Bose, Hansraj Gupta, Harish Chandra |
Raghu Raj Bahadur (30 April 1924 – 7 July 1997) was an Indian statistician considered by peers to be "one of the architects of the modern theory of mathematical statistics".
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Biography
Bahadur was born in Delhi, India, and received his BA (1943) and MA (1945) in mathematics from University of Delhi. He received his doctorate from the University of North Carolina under Herbert Robbins in 1950 after which he joined University of Chicago. He worked as a research statistician at the Indian Statistical Institute in Calcutta from 1956 to 1961. He spent the remainder of his academic career in the University of Chicago.
Contributions
He published numerous papers and is best known for the concepts of "Bahadur Efficiency" and the Bahadur-Ghosh-Kiefer representation (with J. K. Ghosh and Jack Kiefer)
He also framed the Anderson–Bahadur algorithm along with Theodore Wilbur Anderson which is used in statistics and engineering for solving binary classification problems when the underlying data have multivariate normal distributions with different covariance matrices.
Legacy
He held the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship (1968-69) and was the 1974 Wald Lecturer of the IMS. He was the President of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics from 1974-75 and was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1986.