Monte Carlo methods are used in many application areas, including: finance, bioinformatics, computer graphics, discrete event simulation, physics, and statistical inference. We will cover a broad selection of topics, touching on some applications, and on recent developments in Markov chain Monte Carlo and quasi-Monte Carlo.Here is a list of topics. Last time we were able to cover almost all of them. This course no longer covers computer experiments. Monte Carlo methods are used in almost every branch of science and engineering. The topics that are most important are .... the ones that help you solve your problems. This varies from person to person. I've selected topics ranging from fundamental, that almost everybody needs a little, to specialized that some people will need a lot. The students have come from: statistics, computer science (graphics, machine learning, information retrieval), finance, biology, education, aero-astro, in the recent past.
- Art Owen
- Sequoia Hall 130
- My userid is owenbuzzard on stanfordbuzzard.edu (remember to remove the carrion eaters)
- Office hour: Tuesday 2:15-3:05 (except Sept 27!)
The class text is a course reader called "Monte Carlo Methods" available at the Stanford Bookstore. This is a draft of a book I'm writing on the course topics.More references appear here. (A few links are broken at present.)
The homework will involve a mix of programming assignments using Monte Carlo and theoretical exercises. The mix is tilted towards applying Monte Carlo. Most students solve the problems with R or MATLAB, whichever they are most fluent with.
The midterm is closed book, closed to notes and closed to calculators, PDAs etc. All you'll need is a blue book and a pen (and we bring the blue books).
Be sure to give Axess a working email address:
I expect to send a small number of important emails about the problem sets to the class via Axess. Most other announcements will be made in class. Also make sure to put stat 362 in the subject line of emails. Otherwise your email won't come to the top when I search for course related emails and I might not see it until end of quarter.Late penalties apply:
The assigned homework is due in class on paper on the date assigned. After class ends it becomes one day late. 24 hours after class ends it becomes two days late, etc. Each day late is penalized by 10% of the homework value. Homework more than 4 days late will ordinarily get 0. If you're travelling, you can email a pdf file. Late work can be pushed under my door.To allow for sickness, interviews and other events, up to 3 days of late work are forgiven at the end of the quarter. (Work late enough to get zero does not get redeemed though.)