Weekly Calendar of Seminars, Talks, and Events
Department of Mathematics & Statistics
Bowling Green State University
Jump to Colloquium Announcement.
Week of April 19 - 23
Monday, April 19
2:30 GROUPS AND GEOMETRIES SEMINAR - Room 459 MSC
Sergey Shpectorov, Mathematics and Statistics, BGSU
"Orthogonal and symplectic groups and geometries"
3:30 ANALYSIS SEMINAR - Room 459 MSC
Tony Tang, Mathematics and Statistics, BGSU
"The P1 nonconforming FEM with accurate flux for elliptic
problem without using mixed methods is a finite volume box
method"
Tuesday, April 20
4:00 STATISTICS SEMINAR - Room 459 MSC
Arthur Yeh, Applied Statistics and Operations Research, BGSU
"Control charts"
Wednesday, April 21
2:30 GROUPS AND GEOMETRIES SEMINAR - Room 459 MSC
Sergey Shpectorov, Mathematics and Statistics, BGSU
"Orthogonal and symplectic groups and geometries"
3:30 ALGEBRA SEMINAR - Room 459 MSC
To be announced
3:30 STATISTICS SEMINAR - Room 304 MSC **** Note room ****
G. P. Patil, Distinguished Lukacs Professor, BGSU
"Environmental sampling and observational economy with emphasis
on encounter sampling, composite sampling, ranked set sampling,
and adaptive cluster sampling"
Abstract:
Encounter Sampling: Surveys for monitoring changes and trends in
our environment and its resources involve some unusual
conceptual and methodological issues pertaining to the
observer, the observed, and the observational process.
Problems that are not typical of current statistical theory
and practice arise. In statistical ecology and environmental
statistics, the theory of weighted distributions provides a
perceptive and unifying approach for the problems of model
specification and data interpretation within the context of
encounter sampling. Appropriate statistical modeling
approaches help accomplish unbiased inference in spite of the
biased data and, at times, even provide a more informative and
economic setup.
Adaptive Sampling: Several ecological and environmental
populations are spatially distributed in a clumped
manner. They are not very efficiently sampled by conventional
probability based sampling designs. Adaptive sampling is
therefore introduced as a multistage design in which only the
initial sample is obtained using a conventional probability
based procedure. When the variable of interest for a sampling
unit satisfies a given criterion, however, additional units in
the neighborhood are selected in the next sampling stage.
This procedure is repeated until no new units satisfy the
criterion, or the conditions of a stopping rule are satisfied.
With the recent growth of geographic information systems
(GIS), spatial data coverages for landscapes are becoming
universal. Such information, obtained mainly from digitized
maps and remotely sensed sources, may provide a powerful aid
to adaptive cluster sampling for increasing the efficiency of
sampling clustered populations from across a two-dimensional
surface.
Observational Economy: Sampling consists of selection,
acquisition, and quantification of a part of the population.
While selection and acquisition apply to physical sampling
units of the population, quantification pertains only to the
variable of interest, which is a particular characteristic of
the sampling units. A minimum requirement is that
identification and acquisition of sampling units be
inexpensive as compared with their quantification.
Composite Samples: Composite sampling has its roots in what is
known as group testing. An early application of group testing
was to estimate the prevalence of plant virus transmission by
insects. In this application, insect vectors were allowed to
feed upon host plants, thus allowing the disease transmission
rate to be estimated from the number of plants that
subsequently become diseased. In light of recent
developments, composite sampling is increasingly becoming an
acceptable practice for sampling soils, biota, and bulk
materials.
A recent breakthrough with composite samples may be worth
mentioning. The individual sample with the highest value,
along with those individual samples comprising an upper
percentile, can now be identified with minimal retesting.
This ability is extremely important when "hot spots" need to
be identified such as with soil monitoring at a hazardous
waste site.
Ranked Set Samples: Ranked set sampling is a little known method
of sampling that allows the use of auxiliary information for
improving upon the performance of simple random sampling. The
primary requirement is the ability to rank small sets of
sampling units with respect to the variable of interest
without actually measuring that variable. Subjective
judgment, prior experience, visual inspection, and concomitant
variables are among the types of auxiliary information that
may be used to achieve the ranking. The method does not
prescribe any specific form or structure for the auxiliary
information and the method is accordingly quite robust.
Errors in ranking are permitted, although the better the
ranking, the better the performance of the method.
Ranked set sampling (RSS), induces stratification of the whole
population at the sample level, and provides a kind of double
sampling estimator that is robust.
Friday, April 23
1999 Lukacs Symposium; see http://www-math.bgsu.edu/symposium/ for
complete information. Also see abstracts posted on 4th floor of MSC.
8:00 Registration outside Olscamp 111
9:30 Inaugural - Olscamp 111
10:00 Coffee break
10:30 Perspectives on environmental statistics - Olscamp 111
12:30 Lunch
2:00 Three simultaneous sessions in Olscamp 111, 220, 224
4:00 Coffee break
4:30 Three simultaneous sessions in Olscamp 111, 220, 224
8:00 Mixer at Kaufman's at the Lodge, Friendship room
All are invited!
Saturday, April 24
1999 Lukacs Symposium continues
8:00 Three simultaneous sessions in Olscamp 111, 213, 215
10:00 Coffee break
10:30 Four simultaneous sessions in Olscamp 111, 211, 213, 215
12:30 Lunch
2:00 Four simultaneous sessions in Olscamp 111, 211, 213, 215
4:00 Coffee break
4:30 Perspectives on the next century - Olscamp 111
7:00 Reception at Kaufman's at the Lodge, Atrium
7:30 Banquet (contact Jim Albert immediately if you want to attend)
8:30 Award ceremony
9:30 Millennium milestones
10:00 Millennium in transition; NASA presentation
Sunday, April 25
8:00 Perspectives on the next century - Olscamp 111
10:00 Coffee break
10:30 Perspectives on the next century - Olscamp 111
12:30 Lunch
2:00 Two simultaneous sessions in Olscamp 213, 215