Susan P. Holmes
American biostatistician / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Susan P. Holmes is an American statistician and professor at Stanford University. She is noted for her work in applying nonparametric multivariate statistics, bootstrapping methods, and data visualization to biology.[1][2]
Quick Facts Alma mater, Awards ...
Susan Holmes | |
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Alma mater | Université Montpellier II |
Awards |
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Scientific career | |
Fields | Biostatistics |
Institutions | INRA, Montpellier MIT Harvard University Cornell University Stanford University |
Thesis | Computer-Intensive Methods for the Evaluation of Results after an Exploratory Analysis (1985) |
Doctoral advisor | Yves Escoufier |
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She received her PhD in 1985 from Université Montpellier II. She served as a tenured research scientist at INRA for ten years.[3] She then taught at MIT and Harvard and was an associate professor of biometry at Cornell before moving to Stanford in 1998.[1] She is married to fellow Stanford professor Persi Diaconis.[4]
She is a Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics.[5]