Steven joined the department of Mathematics at the University of Nebraska at Omaha in 1986 as an Assistant Professor. He received a Ph.D. in Mathematical Statistics from the department of Mathematics and Statistics at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in 1985. He also taught operations research for one semester as a Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in the department of Mathematics and Statistics during 1986. Steven has taught over 25 different courses in both mathematics and statistics in his 34 year career. He has also given numerous independent studies in statistics, probability, and analysis.
Steven has published research papers in mathematical statistics, applied statistics, applied probability theory, reliability theory, mathematical inequalities in probability, statistics and analysis, differential equations, computer science applications, and has collaborated with many individuals outside the department including researchers at the University of New Orleans, Rutgers University, Creighton University, and Victoria University in Australia. Recently, his research has focused more on mathematical inequalities, including some which have applications in probability and statistics, such as Jensen’s inequality.
Steven has won several awards, including the Kerrigan Teaching award as well as the James Earl Diamond Professorship of Mathematics in 2006. During his Kerrigan research grant, his students have done well, including one first place finish and one second place finish in a student mathematics research competition. Prior to 2005, Steven was one of only two faculty trained in statistics as their primary research area, and he did significant statistical consulting with other faculty and students, including faculty and students from the University of Nebraska Medical Center and Creighton University. He has done statistical consulting work with individuals outside the university, including local area educators and Engineers as well. He also has supervised the Master’s thesis of eight students, three of which went on to obtain a Ph.D. in mathematics, statistics or some other related area. He lists this as one of his greatest accomplishments.
Estimating Parameters of Distributions Using Mean Residual Life Functionsr.
Approximating the Distribution of the Sum of Independent and Dependent Bernoulli Random Variables with an Application to the Two State Markov Chain.
Confidence Intervals for Ratios of Multinomial Proportions.
Statistical Modelling for Extreme Precipitation in Sri Lanka.
Some New Closed-Form Small-Sample Estimators for the Linear Failure Rate and Birnbaum-Saunders Distributions.
Approximation of Expected Values of Non-Linear Functions of Random Variables.
Asymptotic Confidence Intervals for Certain Functions of Population Moments.
Approximating Discrete Distributions Using Rational Functions.
Approximations and Bounds for the Extinction Probability of a Galton-Watson Branching Process.