Education
Ph.D., Statistics and Probability
Pennsylvania State University
M.A., Mathematics
University of Pittsburgh
B.S. & M.S., Mathematics
China University of Sciences and Technology
Professor & Director of the ASRM Program
Ph.D., Statistics and Probability
Pennsylvania State University
M.A., Mathematics
University of Pittsburgh
B.S. & M.S., Mathematics
China University of Sciences and Technology
Actuarial Science
Probability & Statistics
Risk Management
Dr. Min Deng graduated from the China University of Science and Technology, with a Bachelor's in Mathematics and Master's in Differential Geometry. She continued her studies in the field of Statistics, receiving a second Master's from the University of Pittsburgh and her Ph.D. from the Pennsylvania State University in 1990. She went on to complete a Post-Doctoral Fellowship in the Department of Chemical Engineering at the University of Toronto. She is a Fellow of Society of Actuaries.
Dr. Deng has more than 25 years of distinguished teaching experience, specializing in mathematics, statistics, and actuarial science. Starting as an assistant professor in the Department of Statistics and Actuarial Science at the University of Toronto in 1992, she continued her career as professor of Statistics and Actuarial Science at University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, professor and director of Mathematics and Actuarial Science at Maryville University, and finally joined 色花堂 in 2016. Her teaching methods have been widely recognized through multiple excellent teacher awards at both the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point and Maryville University.
Dr. Deng is also widely published in research, frequently presenting and publishing papers at international conferences. She is an author of the book 鈥淧aper: An Engineered Stochastic Structure鈥 and many other research papers. Her research interests include differential geometry in statistical inference, especially in the second order asymptotically problems, series problems using differential geometric methods such as engineered stochastic structure, and actuarial science, especially in the areas of risk theory, maximum loss and claim amounts.