- Joined
- 7/20/13
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From what I've seen/researched on quantnet the typical Ph.D that people who work in quantitative finance are usually Math, Stats , Economics, EE, Etc.
Programs in Computational Science, which are relatively new have emerged at top schools:
http://icme.stanford.edu/
http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/mathematics/18-085-computational-science-and-engineering-i-fall-2008/
http://iacs.seas.harvard.edu/
http://citris-uc.org/decse/philosophy
For those that don't know Computational Science is basically using mathematical models and computers to solve problems. Looking at the programs themselves it seems like they are very flexible and easily applied to one's field of interest, which could very well be finance( and in fact, stanford has a financial analyst track for its M.S.).
A huge part of Computational Science is modeling and simulation.
Because the programs combine the two fields that are used in computational finance: Mathematics and Computer science, it seems like this kind of Ph.D would be perfect for a prospective quant.. Does anyone know how useful a Ph.D in this field would be for a research position in quantitative finance?
I'm doing my best to look into placement for these programs, but as they are fairly new its difficult for someone like me who "isn't in the know" to assess the quality of these programs for myself without much historical data for these programs.
Programs in Computational Science, which are relatively new have emerged at top schools:
http://icme.stanford.edu/
http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/mathematics/18-085-computational-science-and-engineering-i-fall-2008/
http://iacs.seas.harvard.edu/
http://citris-uc.org/decse/philosophy
For those that don't know Computational Science is basically using mathematical models and computers to solve problems. Looking at the programs themselves it seems like they are very flexible and easily applied to one's field of interest, which could very well be finance( and in fact, stanford has a financial analyst track for its M.S.).
A huge part of Computational Science is modeling and simulation.
Because the programs combine the two fields that are used in computational finance: Mathematics and Computer science, it seems like this kind of Ph.D would be perfect for a prospective quant.. Does anyone know how useful a Ph.D in this field would be for a research position in quantitative finance?
I'm doing my best to look into placement for these programs, but as they are fairly new its difficult for someone like me who "isn't in the know" to assess the quality of these programs for myself without much historical data for these programs.