Complex Analysis and Statistics

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I have a degree in Engineering. Now I am back to school, for a 2 year Master's degree in Statistics. The second semester just started. And there will be a 3rd. Is there a chance that I will need complex numbers? My background in Complex Analysis is very limited. Should I study any Complex Analysis? What books?
This is a Statistics course, so they don't teach other than Statistics! At least that's how it was in the 1st semester.

Thanks.
 
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If you take mathematical statistics courses, or a course in probability theory, you may, depending on the level, see some complex analysis ideas relating to characteristic functions of distributions.
I think it is far more likely that your multivariate calculus and linear algebra skills will be important, if your classes center on applications.
 
Thanks for your reply.

These are the courses we are going to have this semester:

Bayesian statistics
Experimental design
Sampling
Space-time statistics
Multivariate statistics
Survival analysis
Biostatistics

For the 3rd semester we don't know yet. There is a list of options. From which a few will be voted by the students. And yes, "Mathematical statistics" is on the list.
 
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The following is more or less taken from page 6 of C. Smorynski's "Self-Reference and Modal Logic". (Springer, 1985) (I couldn't get raised brackets to indicate codification (Gödel numbering), so I use a box. The overline is assigning a name. The detail I would like clarification on is in the second step in the last line, where we have an m-overlined, and we substitute the expression for m. Are we saying that the name of a coded term is the same as the coded term? Thanks in advance.

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