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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Kiyohiko G. Nishimura , Hiroyuki OzakiPublisher: Springer Verlag, Japan Imprint: Springer Verlag, Japan Edition: 1st ed. 2017 Weight: 6.447kg ISBN: 9784431559016ISBN 10: 4431559019 Pages: 326 Publication Date: 22 November 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsThis book was awarded the 61st Nikkei Prize for Excellent Books in Economic Science 2018 by The Japan Center for Economic Research Kiyohiko Nishimura and Hiroyuki Ozaki have produced a thorough, scholarly, and mathematical rigorous treatment of decision theory when the probability distribution governing uncertainty is unknown ... . Nishimura and Ozaki are to be congratulated on their thorough and innovative treatment of how to use convex Choquet capacities to make fundamental uncertainty operational, under certain assumptions. Their book will be indispensable to, and warmly welcomed by, technically oriented researchers in decision theory. (Robert W. Dimand, Journal of Economics, Vol. 124, 2018) Kiyohiko Nishimura and Hiroyuki Ozaki have produced a thorough, scholarly, and mathematical rigorous treatment of decision theory when the probability distribution governing uncertainty is unknown ... . Nishimura and Ozaki are to be congratulated on their thorough and innovative treatment of how to use convex Choquet capacities to make fundamental uncertainty operational, under certain assumptions. Their book will be indispensable to, and warmly welcomed by, technically oriented researchers in decision theory. (Robert W. Dimand, Journal of Economics, Vol. 124, 2018) Author InformationKiyohiko G. NishimuraKiyohiko G. Nishimura is emeritus professor of economics and distinguished project research fellow at The University of Tokyo and a professor of economics in the National Graduate Institute for Public Policy (GRIPS). Before returning to academia, he was deputy governor of the Bank of Japan for 5 years until March 19, 2013, one of the most turbulent periods in the history of the world economy and central banking. He received his B.A. (1975) and M.A. (1977) from The University of Tokyo and his Ph.D. (1982) from Yale University. He was associate professor (1983–1994) and professor (1994–2005). He joined the Bank of Japan as a Member of its Policy Board (2005–2008), and then as deputy governor (2008–2013). He was dean of the Graduate School of Economics at The University of Tokyo (2013–2015). Since February 2014, he has been chairman of the Statistics Commission of the Government of Japan. He received the Nikkei Prize in 1993, the Japan Economist Prize in 1997, and the TELECOM Social Science Award in 2006. He was also the winner of the Japanese Economic Association Nakahara Prize in 1998 for his outstanding international contribution to mathematical economics and economic theory. He was awarded Emperor ’s Medal of Honor with Purple Ribbon in 2015 for his outstanding contribution to theoretical economics. Hiroyuki Ozaki Hiroyuki Ozaki is professor of economics at Keio University. He has been particularly active in developing the theory of dynamic decision making, where non-additive probability measures are used, with applications to elucidation of macroeconomic phenomena that are hard to explain in the traditional additive probability framework. He received his B.A. (1986) from Keio University and his Ph.D. (1992) from The University of Wisconsin at Madison, where he majored in economics and minored in mathematics. He was assistant professor at The University of Western Ontario (1993–1996) and associate professor at Tohoku University (1996–2005) before joining the Faculty of Economics at Keio University in 2005. He has been professor at Keio University since then. Dr. Ozaki’s academic research focuses on mathematical economics and the decision-theoretic foundation of economic agents’ behavior. Among his numerous contributions to this field, most notable is: ""Dynamic programming for non-additive stochastic objectives,"" Journal of Mathematical Economics 25 (1996), 391–442 (with Peter A. Streufert), which developed powerful tool kits for dynamic analyses that can be available in a very general economic environment. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |