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Ian McKeague
Professor Department of Biostatistics Mailman School of Public Health phone: (212) 342-1242
fax: (212) 305-9408
e-mail: im2131 "at" columbia "dot" edu
address: Department of Biostatistics, Room R639, 722 West 168th Street, New York, NY 10032
Teaching: Fall 2007, Asymptotic Statistics (P9111). pdf file of syllabus.
Ian has a B.A. and an M.A. in mathematics from the University of Cambridge, and a Ph.D. in statistics from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1980. He was on the faculty of the Department of Statistics of the Florida State University, 1980-2005. He was on sabbatical leave at the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute of the University of California at Berkeley, and then at the Laboratoire de Modélisation et Calcul of the Université Joseph Fourier, Grenoble, France, 1991-1992. He served as Chair of the FSU Statistics department, 1996-99, and was named the Ralph A. Bradley Professor of Statistics at FSU in 2000. He has been a Professor of Biostatistics at Columbia University since 2004. His research interests include survival analysis, competing risks models for HIV/AIDS data, Markov chain Monte Carlo and Bayesian methods, empirical likelihood, statistical methods in physical oceanography, functional data analysis, inference for stochastic processes, simultaneous inference, efficient estimation for semiparametric models, missing data, counting processes, image analysis, spatial point processes. He served as an associate editor of the Annals of Statistics for seven years, the Journal of the American Statistical Association for four years, and is currently serving on the editorial boards of Statistical Inference for Stochastic Processes, and the International Journal of Biostatistics. He is a fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics and a fellow of the American Statistical Association.
CV [pdf file] Current research MathSciNet Math genealogy CIS CU Catalogs TDF McKeague genealogy
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The initial `S' in Shakespeare's signature from the Welcombe Enclosure Agreement, 1614 (reference: pdf file).
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Reconstructed ocean circulation (advection) and oxygen concentration (at a depth of 2 km) in the South Atlantic (reference: pdf file).