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American statistician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Janet Suzanne Sinsheimer (August 28, 1957 – March 14, 2023)[1][2] was an American expert in statistical genetics who worked as a professor of human genetics, biomathematics and biostatistics in the Fielding School of Public Health at the University of California, Los Angeles.[3] Topics in her research included genome-wide association studies, epigenetics, and Bayesian methods for phylogenetics.
Sinsheimer was born in Montclair, New Jersey in 1957.[2]
Sinsheimer graduated from Brown University in 1979, majoring in chemistry. She earned a master's degree in biochemistry in 1985 from Brandeis University, a second master's degree in biomathematics in 1988 from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), and a Ph.D. in biomathematics in 1994 from UCLA.[3] Her dissertation, Extensions to Evolutionary Parsimony, concerned phylogeny (the inference of evolutionary trees), and was jointly supervised by evolutionary biologist James A. Lake and biostatistician Roderick J. A. Little.[4]
Sinsheimer became a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 2013.[5] The Linnean Society of London elected her as a fellow in 2014.[6] In 2017 the Boston University Department of Biostatistics gave her the L. Adrienne Cupples Award for Excellence in Teaching, Research, and Service in Biostatistics.[7]
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