Itô calculus is a method used in the mathematical study of random events and is applied in various fields, and is perhaps best known for its use in mathematical finance. In particular, the Itô's lemma's best known application is in the derivation of the Black–Scholes equation for option values.[2]
Fellow mathematician Daniel W. Stroock noted that "People all over realized that what Ito had done explained things that were unexplainable before."[4] Economist Robert C. Merton stated that Itô's work had provided him "a very useful tool" in his own prize-winning work.[4]
From 1939 to 1943 he worked as a Statistical Officer with the Statistics Bureau of the Cabinet Secretariat,[6] There he was given rein by management to continue his research.[5] His breakthrough paper, "On Stochastic Processes", appeared in 1942.[7]
In 1943, he was appointed an assistant professor at Nagoya Imperial University,[5] where he benefited from discussions with the mathematicians Kōsaku Yosida and Shizuo Kakutani.[8]
From investigations done during this period he published a series of articles in which he defined the stochastic integral and laid the foundations of the Itō calculus.
Meanwhile, he received his Doctor of Science degree from the Imperial University of Tokyo in 1945.[6]
These works were published despite the difficulties of life in Japan during World War II, including problems accessing libraries and especially the loss of contact with Western mathematicians and the lack of awareness of results from them.[3][5] For instance, the only other Japanese mathematician actively interested in Itô's work during the war, Gisiro Maruyama, read a mimeographed copy of a paper while in a military camp.[8] Scholarly activity during the Occupation of Japan had its difficulties; in one case, paper shortages were such that a lengthy Itô article could not be published in a Japanese journal and he had to arrange for an American journal to publish it instead.[8] Ito later referred to his time at Nagoya as having been during "the dark age of World War II and its aftermath."[8]
After this period he continued to develop his ideas on stochastic analysis with many important papers on the topic.
In 1952, he became a professor at the University of Kyoto.[2] His most well-known text, Probability Theory, appeared in 1953.[7]
Itô remained affiliated with Kyoto until his retirement in 1979. [5]
However, beginning in the 1950s, Itô spent long periods of time away from Japan.[4] He was at the Institute for Advanced Study from 1954 to 1956 while on a Fulbright fellowship;[6] while there he worked closely with William Feller and Henry McKean who were at nearby Princeton University.[8] He was a professor at Stanford University from 1961 to 1964 and a professor at Aarhus University from 1966 to 1969.[6]
Then in 1969 Itô arrived at Cornell University, where he was a professor of mathematics for six years until 1975.[7] This was his longest stint outside Japan.[6] Among the courses he taught at Cornell was one in Higher Calculus.[9]
Itô wrote not only in Japanese but also in Chinese, German, French and English.[4] However, his ability to converse in foreign languages was a different matter, and by his own admission his accent made him largely incomprehensible to Americans.[4]
When Itô left Cornell and returned to the University of Kyoto, he served as director of their Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences.[2] After his retirement, he became professor emeritus at Kyoto University.[2] He also had a post-retirement position as a professor at the private Gakushuin University for several years,[6] a common practice among higher-ranking Japanese academics.[5]
In his later years, Itô struggled with poor health.[5]
Itô was awarded the inaugural Gauss Prize in 2006 by the International Mathematical Union for his lifetime achievements.[2] As he due to his health was unable to travel to Madrid, his youngest daughter, Junko Ito, received the Gauss Prize from King Juan Carlos I on his behalf.[10] Later, IMU President Sir John Macleod Ball personally presented the medal to Itô at a special ceremony held in Kyoto.[11]
In October 2008, Itô was honored with Japan's Order of Culture, and an awards ceremony for the Order of Culture was held at the Imperial Palace.[12]
^ abcdeItô, Kiyosi (2014) [1987]. "Foreword". In Stroock, D. W.; Varadhan, S. R. S. (eds.). Kiyosi Itô Selected Papers. New York: Springer-Verlag. pp. xiii–xvii. ISBN978-1461496304. Subsequently reproduced in Chern, S S; Hirzebruch, F, eds. (2000). Wolf Prize in Mathematics. Vol. 1. Singapore: World Scientific. pp. 531–535.
^Cornell University Announcements: College of Arts and Sciences, 1974–75. Cornell University. 1 July 1974. p. 127.
Kunita, Hiroshi (May 2010), "Itô's stochastic calculus: its surprising power for applications", Stochastic Processes and Their Applications, 120 (5): 7622–652, doi:10.1016/j.spa.2010.01.013