Stanisław Czesław Trybuła (2 January 1932 – 28 January 2008[2]) was a Polish mathematician and statistician.

Stanisław Czesław Trybuła
Born(1932-01-02)2 January 1932
Rafałówka, Poland
Died7 January 2008(2008-01-07) (aged 76)[2]
Wrocław, Poland
Alma materNicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń
Wrocław University
Known forSequential analysis
Estimation
Game theory
AwardsHonored Teacher of the Polish People's Republic Commander's Cross with Star Medal of the National Education Commission
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics, statistics, game theory
InstitutionsWrocław University of Technology
Institute of Power Systems (IASE) in Wrocław
Doctoral advisorHugo Steinhaus[1]
Doctoral studentsZdzisław Józef Porosiński, Ryszard Magiera, Magdalena Rutkowska, Andrzej Cegielski[1]

Early life and education

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He was a pupil of state high school in Rypin, Poland, and he graduated from The First High School in Toruń in 1950. He studied mathematics in Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń and Wrocław University. He defended his master thesis on some problems of the game theory prepared under supervision of Hugo Steinhaus at Wrocław University in 1955.

Academic career

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In 1955 he became a faculty member at Department of Mathematics, Wrocław University of Technology. In 1959 he was distinguished as the candidate of science and in 1960 he defended his PhD on minimax estimation under supervision of Hugo Steinhaus. Many years Trybuła cooperated or was the staff member of Institute of Power Systems (IASE) in Wrocław. He worked out the original method of identification of the complex power systems. Since 1968 he was faculty member of the Institute of Mathematics, Faculty of Fundamental Problems of Technology, Wrocław University of Technology. Stanisław Trybuła got habilitation at Faculty of Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry, Wrocław University in 1968 based on his seminal works on sequential analysis for stochastic processes.[3] In 1973, he became an associate professor, and in 1988, a full professor of mathematical sciences.[4]

Contributions

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He was the advisor of 14 PhD theses.[1] He published 102 works independently and 38 co-authored ones[5][6] He took early retirement in 1998 and was writing academic books on statistics and the game theory.

Stanisław Trybuła is the co-author of the WJ bidding system in the bridge, known also as Polish Club (see also, following Stayman convention, Trybula transfers, Wesolowski texas, Gawrys fourth suit forcing).[7][8]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Mathematics Genealogy Project". Retrieved 9 February 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Grave record for Stanisław Trybuła (2 January 1932 – 28 January 2008), BillionGraves Record 17127859 Wrocław, wrocławski, dolnośląskie, Poland". Retrieved 2021-02-24.
  3. ^ Trybuła, Stanisław. "Sequential estimation in processes with independent increments". Dissertationes Mathematicae. 60 (1968): 1–46.
  4. ^ Burak, Marek; Pregiel, Piotr. Tytularni profesorowie Politechniki Wrocławskiej 1945–1967 (PDF). Politechnika Wrocławska. ISBN 978-83-7493-885-3. s. 11,102
  5. ^ Trybuła, Stanisław (1972). "List of publication in MathSciNet". MathSciNet. Retrieved 2021-02-19.
  6. ^ Trybuła, Stanisław (1972). "Publication reviewed in zbMATH". zbMATH Open. Retrieved 2021-02-19.
  7. ^ Bogumił Seifert and Selim Achmatowicz, ed. (1996). "Trybuła transfers". Encyklopedia Brydża. Waszawa: PWN. p. 796.
  8. ^ Jassem, Krzysztof (2005) [2004]. Maciej Wręczycki (ed.). Wspólny Język 2005 (Polish Standard). Translated into English by Daniel J. Neill. 62-040 Puszczykowo, ul. Bałtycka 12, Poland: Magdalena Jassem. ISBN 83-919009-1-6. Archived from the original on 2007-11-05.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)