Biography:Mei-Cheng Wang
Mei-Cheng Wang is a biostatistician in the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.[1] Her research includes both theoretical work on survival analysis and statistical truncation, and applications to medical questions including prenatal and infant care, AIDS infection, and kidney disease.
Wang earned a bachelor's degree in mathematics from National Tsing Hua University in 1978. She completed a master's degree in 1983 and a Ph.D. in 1985 in statistics from the University of California, Berkeley.[1] Her dissertation, supervised by Nicholas P. Jewell, was Regression Analysis with Selection Biased Dependent Variable.[2] She has been on the Johns Hopkins faculty since 1985.[1]
In 1998, Wang was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association. She was elected to the International Statistical Institute in 2015, and as a fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics in 2017 "for influential contributions to survival analysis, including theory and application of random truncation and recurrent event processes".[1][3] Also in 2017, the International Chinese Statistical Association gave her their Outstanding Service Award.[4]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Curriculum vitae, http://www.biostat.jhsph.edu/~mcwang/Wang_CV_web.pdf, retrieved 2017-10-31
- ↑ Mei-Cheng Wang at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ↑ "2017 IMS Fellows", IMS Bulletin (Institute of Mathematical Statistics), May 15, 2017, http://bulletin.imstat.org/2017/05/2017-ims-fellows/, retrieved 2017-10-31
- ↑ 2017 ICSA Awards Recipients, http://www.icsa.org/icsa/news/2017-icsa-awards-recipients, retrieved 2017-10-31
External links
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mei-Cheng Wang.
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