John C. Gittins

John C. Gittins
Born 1938 (age 7778)
Alma mater University of Wales
Thesis Optimal resource allocation in chemical research (1968)
Doctoral advisor Dennis Lindley
Known for Gittins index
Notable awards Rollo Davidson Prize (1982)
Guy Medal (Silver, 1984)

John Charles Gittins (born 1938) is a researcher in applied probability and operations research, who is a professor and Emeritus Fellow at Keble College, Oxford University.

He is renowned as the developer of the "Gittins index", which is used for sequential decision-making, especially in research and development in the pharmaceutical industry.[1][2] He has research interests in applied probability, decision analysis and optimal decisions, including optimal stopping and stochastic optimization.

Gittins was an Assistant Director of Research at the Department of Engineering, Cambridge University from 1967 to 1974. Then he was a lecturer at Oxford University from 1975 to 2005 and head of the Department of Statistics there for 6 years. In 1992, Oxford University awarded him the degree Doctor of Science (D. Sci.). In 1996 he became a Professor of Statistics at Oxford University.

He has been awarded the Rollo Davidson Prize (1982) for early-career probabilists, and the Guy Medal in Silver (1984).

Selected publications

References

  1. Whittle, Peter (1980). "Multi-armed bandits and the Gittins index". Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series B. 42 (2): 143–149. JSTOR 2984953.
  2. Whittle, Peter (2002). "Applied probability in Great Britain (50th anniversary issue of Operations Research)". Oper. Res. 50 (1): 227–239. doi:10.1287/opre.50.1.227.17792. JSTOR 3088474.

External links

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