Doctoral students
1985
Steven P. Millard (Biomathematics):
Statistical methods and optimal sampling designs for detection of aquatic
ecological change. Now running PSI, a consulting company, and Co-Manager of the Statistical Analysis Unit of
the Cystic Fibrosis Therapeutics Development Network Coordinating Center.
Daijin Ko (Statistics): Robust statistics on compact metric spaces.
Now Professor of Management Science and Statistics at University of Texas, San
Antonio.
1987
Wasima Rida (Biostatistics): Stochastic models for the spread of communicable
diseases: parameter estimates and their properties.
Now Senior Investigator at Statistics Collaborative.
Gary Grunwald
(Statistics): Time series models for continuous proportions. Now
Associate Professor of Biometry at University of Colorado Denver.
Steve Kaluzny (Quantitative Ecology): Estimation of trends in spatial
data. Now Technical Director at Insigthful, Seattle. email.
1988
Pat Sullivan
(Quantitative Ecology): Catch at length analysis: a Kalman filter
approach. Now Associate Professor of Natural Resources, Cornell University.
1993
James P. Hughes (Statistics):
A class of stochastic models for relating synoptic atmospheric patterns
to local hydrologic phenomena. Now Research Professor of
Biostatistics, University of Washington.
Ken Newman (Statistics):
State-space modeling of salmon migration and a Monte Carlo alternative
to the Kalman filter. Now Mathematical Statistician
at the
US Fish and Wildlife Service in Stockton, CA.
1994
Renato Assunçao (Statistics):
Robust estimation in point processes. Professor of Statistics, Federal
University of Minas Gerais, Brazil.
1995
Dean Billheimer (Statistics): Statistical analysis of biological monitoring
data: state space models for species composition. Now Director of Biostatistics,
Huntsman Cancer Institute, University of Utah.
Wendy Meiring (Statistics):
Estimation of heterogeneous space-time covariance. Now Assistant
Professor of Statistics, University of California at Santa Barbara.
1996
Ian Painter (Statistics): Inference in a discrete parameter space.
Now Biostatistician at Foundation for Health Care Quality, Seattle. email
1997
Sandra
Catlin (Statistics): Statistical inference for partially observed
Markov population models. Now Associate Professor of Mathematical Sciences,
University of Nevada at Las Vegas.
1998
Brandon Whitcher (Statistics):
Assessing nonstationary time series using wavelets. Now at
Research Statistics Unit UK, GlaxoSmithKline, Essex, UK.
1999
Ashley Steel (Quantitative Ecology and Resource Management): In-stream
factors affecting juvenile salmon out-migration. Now Quantitative
Ecologist at the Northwest
Fisheries Science Center, Seattle.
2000
Enrica Bellone (Statistics):
Nonhomogeneous hidden Markov models for downscaling synoptic atmospheric
patterns to precipitation amounts. Now at Risk Management Solutions,
email
Barnali Das (Statistics):
Global Covariance Modeling: A Deformation Approach to Anisotropy.
Now at Statistical Research and Applications Branch of the National Cancer Institute.
Daniela Golinelli
(Statistics): Bayesian inference in hidden stochastic population
processes. Now Associate Statistician at RAND.
Peter Craigmile
(Statistics): Parameter estimation of trend contaminated long memory
processes. Now Associate Professor of Statistics, Ohio State University.
2002
Doris Damian (Biostatistics): A Bayesian approach to estimating heterogeneous
spatial covariances. Now at BG Medicine.
email
2004
Tamre Cardoso (Quantitative Ecology and Resource Management): A
hierarchical Bayes model for combining precipitation measurements from
different sources. Now lecturer at University of Washington. email
2007
Debashis Mondal (Statistics):
Wavelet variance analysis for time series and random fields. Now Assistant Professor
at the University of Chicago.