Sheldon M. Ross Explained

Sheldon M. Ross is the Daniel J. Epstein Chair and Professor at the USC Viterbi School of Engineering. He is the author of several books in the field of probability.[1]

Biography

Ross received his B. S. degree in mathematics from Brooklyn College in 1963, his M.S. degrees in mathematics from Purdue University in 1964 and his Ph.D. degree in Statistics from Stanford University in 1968, studying under Gerald Lieberman and Cyrus Derman. He served as a Professor at the University of California, Berkeley from 1976 until joining the USC Viterbi School of Engineering in 2004. He serves as the Editor for several journals, among which Probability in the Engineering and Informational Sciences. In 2013 he became a fellow of the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences.

In 1978, he formulated what became known as Ross's conjecture in queuing theory,[2] which was solved three years later by Tomasz Rolski at Poland's Wroclaw University.[3]

Selected publications

Notes and References

  1. Web site: INFORMS. Ross, Sheldon M.. 2021-04-12. INFORMS. en-US.
  2. Ross. Sheldon M.. September 1978. Average delay in queues with non-stationary Poisson arrivals. Journal of Applied Probability. en. 15. 3. 602–609. 10.2307/3213122. 3213122 . 122948002 . 0021-9002.
  3. Rolski. Tomasz. September 1981. Queues with non-stationary input stream: Ross's conjecture. Advances in Applied Probability. en. 13. 3. 603–618. 10.2307/1426787. 1426787 . 124842629 . 0001-8678.