Computational Bayesian Statistics
An Introduction

Institute of Mathematical Statistics Textbooks Series

Authors:

This integrated introduction to fundamentals, computation, and software is your key to understanding and using advanced Bayesian methods.

Language: English
Cover of the book Computational Bayesian Statistics

Subject for Computational Bayesian Statistics

Approximative price 109.06 €

In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).

Add to cartAdd to cart
Computational Bayesian Statistics: Volume 11
Publication date:
254 p. · 15.6x23.5 cm · Hardback

Approximative price 41.94 €

In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).

Add to cartAdd to cart
Computational Bayesian Statistics: Volume 11
Publication date:
254 p. · 15.2x22.7 cm · Paperback
Meaningful use of advanced Bayesian methods requires a good understanding of the fundamentals. This engaging book explains the ideas that underpin the construction and analysis of Bayesian models, with particular focus on computational methods and schemes. The unique features of the text are the extensive discussion of available software packages combined with a brief but complete and mathematically rigorous introduction to Bayesian inference. The text introduces Monte Carlo methods, Markov chain Monte Carlo methods, and Bayesian software, with additional material on model validation and comparison, transdimensional MCMC, and conditionally Gaussian models. The inclusion of problems makes the book suitable as a textbook for a first graduate-level course in Bayesian computation with a focus on Monte Carlo methods. The extensive discussion of Bayesian software - R/R-INLA, OpenBUGS, JAGS, STAN, and BayesX - makes it useful also for researchers and graduate students from beyond statistics.
1. Bayesian inference; 2. Representation of prior information; 3. Bayesian inference in basic problems; 4. Inference by Monte Carlo methods; 5. Model assessment; 6. Markov chain Monte Carlo methods; 7. Model selection and transdimensional MCMC; 8. Methods based on analytic approximations; 9. Software.
M. Antónia Amaral Turkman was, until 2013, full-time Professor in the Department of Statistics and Operations Research, Faculty of Sciences, University of Lisbon. Though retired from the university, she is still a member of its Center of Statistics and Applications, where she held the position of scientific coordinator until 2017. Her research interests are Bayesian statistics, medical and environmental statistics, and spatiotemporal modeling, with recent publications on computational methods in Bayesian statistics, with an emphasis on applications in health and forest fires. She has served as vice president of the Portuguese Statistical Society. She has taught courses on Bayesian statistics and computational statistics, among many others.
Carlos Daniel Paulino is senior academic researcher in the Center of Statistics and Applications and was associate professor with habilitation in the Department of Mathematics of the Instituto Superior Técnico, both at the University of Lisbon. He has published frequently on Bayesian statistics and categorical data, with emphasis on applications in biostatistics. He has served as president of the Portuguese Statistical Society. He taught many undergraduate and graduate level courses, notably in mathematical statistics and Bayesian statistics.
Peter Müller is Professor in the Department of Mathematics and the Department of Statistics and Data Science at the University of Texas, Austin. He has published widely on computational methods in Bayesian statistics, non-parametric Bayesian statistics, and decision problems, with emphasis on applications in biostatistics and bioinformatics. He has served as president of the International Society for Bayesian Analysis, and as chair for the Section on Bayesian Statistics of the American Statistical Association. Besides many graduate-level courses he has taught short courses on Bayesian biostatistics, Bayesian clinical trial design, non-parametric Bayesian inference, medical decision mak