Gisiro Maruyama

Maruyama was born in 1916 and graduated from Tohoku University, where he studied Fourier analysis and physics.

[2] He became interested in probability theory through the study of Norbert Wiener's work.

When Kiyosi Itô published his papers on stochastic differential equations in 1942, Maruyama immediately recognized the importance of this work and soon published a series of papers on stochastic differential equations and Markov processes.

[3] Maruyama is known in particular for his 1955 study of the convergence properties of the finite-difference approximations for the numerical solution of stochastic differential equations, now known as the Euler–Maruyama method.

[5] Maruyama also studied quasi-invariance properties of the Wiener measure, extending previous work by Cameron and Martin to diffusion processes.

Gisiro Maruyama