Basic Skills
To acquire the knowledge and understanding that provide a basis or opportunity for originality in developing and/or applying ideas, often in a research context.
Students must possess the learning skills that enable them to continue studying in a way that will be largely self-directed or autonomous.
General Skills
Students can apply advanced mathematical knowledge to economic analysis.
Students can apply advanced knowledge of specific programs of economics, mathematics and econometrics.
Specific Skills
Students are able to interpret:
- the basic concepts of topology in Euclidean spaces of any dimension and apply them to problems of economic analysis;
- advanced problems of sequences and series of real numbers and apply them to problems of economic analysis;
- advanced problems of continuous functions, convex and concave functions, differentiable functions and apply them to problems of economic analysis;
- advanced problems of convergence of sequences and series of functions and apply them to problems of economic analysis;
- the basic problem of the measure and integration of functions, understanding the main characteristics and differences between Rieman and Lebesgue integral, and apply them to problems of economic analysis;
- the basic problem of the convergence of sequences of integrals, and apply them to problems of economic analysis;
- the classical theorems of fixed points and apply them to problems of economic analysis;
- advanced problems of correspondences and parametric optimization optimization, and apply them to problems of economic analysis.
Learning Results
1. Mastery of the analysis of functions of one or more variables and in metric or normed spaces, as well as basic concepts of topology in these spaces, in particular by adopting an open finding-solutions-and-counterexamples approach.
2. To familiarize students with the mathematical language and the rigor of its statements.
3. Mastery of abstract analysis.
4. To develop the ability to make assumptions that simplify the problems, by giving partial solutions that may be sufficient for a general problem.
5. Mastery of basic mathematical applications in economics, in particular optimization theory, topology, the theorems of continuous functions and correspondences, and fixed point theorems.