Steven Shreve's Ph.D. is in mathematics from the University of Illinois, and I also hold an M.S. degree in electrical engineering and a B.A. degree in German. My research has centered around stochastic control, and in 1980 I began work with John Lehoczky on extensions of the Merton capital asset pricing model, which is really a problem in stochastic control. Since that time, I have worked on the effect of transaction costs and uncertain volatility in the Black-Scholes model and the pricing and hedging of exotic options. More recently, I have become interested in credit derivatives and credit risk. In 1991 I founded the Ph.D. program in Mathematical Finance at Carnegie Mellon, and was a member of the committee which founded the Master's degree program in Computational Finance in 1994. My role in the Master's program is teaching courses on stochastic calculus methods which underly the models for equity and interest rate derivatives. I also teach two-day courses for RISK on stochastic calculus models for finance. With Ioannis Karatzas, I have coauthored the books "Brownian Motion and Stochastic Calculus" and "Methods of Mathematical Finance."

www.math.cmu.edu/users/shreve/