Bulletin IMS   IMS Elections: time to vote

advertisement
Volume 40 • Issue 3
IMS Bulletin
April/May 2011
Contents
1 IMS Elections
2 Members’ News: Joseph
Glaz; Jeff Wu; C R Rao; JCGS
3 Tweedie lecturer interview
4 Rick’s Ramblings:
Proofiness
5 Statistician “fourth best
job”
6 COPSS Fisher Lecture: Jeff
Wu
7 Tribute: Adrian Smith
IMS Elections: time to vote
Goodness, is that the time? Yes, it’s elections again: time to vote for the IMS PresidentElect and five IMS Council members.
The candidate for President-Elect is Hans R. Künsch. Ten candidates are standing
for five places on Council. They are Mathias Drton, Sandrine Dudoit, Steve Evans,
James Allen (Jim) Fill, Paul Gustafson, Byeong U. Park, Sonia Petrone, Christian P.
Robert, Remco van der Hofstad, and Qiwei Yao. You can read all about them on pages
10–15 of this issue.
Online voting is encouraged, though paper ballots are also accepted. All IMS
members will be sent their voting information via email and postcard. If you’re reading
the paper version of this Bulletin, your member ID was printed on the plastic wrapper
it came in. If you prefer a paper ballot, or don’t know your member ID, please contact
Elyse Gustafson, IMS Executive Director, e erg@imstat.org.
Cast your vote online at https://secure.imstat.org/secure/vote2011/vote2011.asp
8 Obituary: Igor Vajda
10–15 Elections: candidate info
16 Awards: nominations
17 Medallion lecture: Itai
Benjamini
18 Terence’s Stuff: Simulation
19 Treasurer’s Report
28 IMS meetings
32 Other meetings
38 Employment Opportunities
39 International Calendar of
Statistical Events
43 Information for Advertisers
IMS Council
elections
2011
voting is open until june 18
http://imstat.org/elections/
IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 • Issue 3
April/May 2011
ISSN 1544-1881
Contact information
IMS Bulletin Editor: Dimitris Politis
Assistant Editor: Tati Howell
Contributing Editors:Peter Bickel, Anirban
DasGupta, Rick Durrett, Nicole Lazar,
Terry Speed
To contact the IMS Bulletin:
IMS Bulletin
2 Lampern View, Uley, Dursley
GL11 5TD
UK
e bulletin@imstat.org
To contact the IMS regarding your dues,
membership, subscriptions, orders or
change of address:
IMS Dues and Subscriptions Office
9650 Rockville Pike, Suite L3503A
Bethesda, MD 20814-3998
USA
t 877-557-4674 [toll-free in USA]
t +1 216 295 5661[international]
f +1 301 634 7099
e staff@imstat.org
To contact the IMS regarding any other
matter, including advertising, copyright
permission, offprint orders, copyright
transfer, societal matters, meetings, fellows
nominations and content of publications:
t
t
f
e
Executive Director, Elyse Gustafson
IMS Business Office
PO Box 22718, Beachwood
OH 44122, USA
877-557-4674 [toll-free in USA]
+1 216 295 5661[international]
+1 216 295 5661
erg@imstat.org
Executive Committee
President:
Peter Hall
president@imstat.org
President-Elect: Ruth Williams
president-elect@imstat.org
Past President: J. Michael Steele
president-past@imstat.org
Treasurer:
Jean Opsomer
jopsomer@stat.colostate.edu
Program Secretary: Guenther Walther
walther@stat.stanford.edu
Executive Secretary:Marten Wegkamp
wegkamp@stat.fsu.edu
2 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
IMS Members’ News
Joseph Glaz, Professor and Associate Head of the Department
of Statistics at the University of Connecticut, and a Fellow of
IMS, has been elected to the Connecticut Academy of Arts and
Sciences. The Connecticut Academy of the Arts and Sciences is the
third-oldest learned society in the United States. Its purpose is the
dissemination of scholarly information. For the past 200 years, the
Academy has fulfilled this mission through lectures and extensive
publications.
Honorary Degree awarded to C R Rao
Joseph Glaz
C. R. Rao was awarded an honorary degree of
Jeff Wu to deliver COPSS Fisher Lecture
at JSM in Miami
Doctor of Science at the first convocation of
the Jawaharlal Nehru Technical University,
Kakinada, India. This is the thirty-third
honorary degree he has now received, from
universities in 18 countries spanning six
continents. Professor Rao
delivered the convocation
address on “The role of
statistics as the key
technology of the
future.”
The 2011 Committee of Presidents of
Statistical Societies (COPSS) has named
C. F. Jeff Wu, Professor and Coca Cola
Chair in Engineering Statistics at Georgia
Institute of Technology, to deliver the Fisher
Lecture at the Joint Statistical Meetings
in Miami. His lecture, “Post-Fisherian
Experimentation: from Physical to Virtual,”
will be on Wednesday August 3, 4pm. You
can read more about Professor Wu and the
Fisher Lecture on page 6.
JCGS now free online to IMS members
The Journal of Computational and Graphical
Statistics (JCGS) is now free online to IMS
members. Shortly, you will receive details
that outline how to set up your free access.
JCGS is celebrating its twentieth year of
publication in 2011. Its editor is Richard
Levine. JCGS works to improve and extend
the use of computational and graphical
methods in statistics and data analysis.
It contains cutting-edge research, data,
surveys, and more on numerical methods,
graphical displays and methods, and perception. Articles are written for readers who
have a strong background in statistics, but
are not necessarily experts in computing.
See http://www.amstat.org/publications/
jcgs.cfm for more information about the
journal.
April/May . 2011
IMS Bulletin . 3
Tweedie Award winner: Hui Zou
As we reported in the last issue, the IMS Travel Awards Committee
have selected Dr. Hui Zou, Associate Professor of Statistics at
the University of Minnesota, as recipient of this year’s Tweedie
New Researcher Award. He will be presenting his Tweedie
New Researcher Invited Lecture at the IMS New Researchers’
Conference, held this year in Miami, Florida, USA in July (details to
follow). Hui answers a few questions:
Hui Zou
Please tell us a little about your research.
I have done some work on sparse learning and variable selection. I am currently working
on some problems in covariance matrix estimation and graphical models.
How did your undergraduate work in physics prepare you for your research in statistics?
The problem-solving skills I learned from physics have been very helpful to my research.
Statistics and physics have a lot in common, especially the modeling part. In physics
the theoretical truth is the simplest model that can best explain experiments and predict
unobservable events. I believe in this scientific philosophy and that is also why I have
strong interests in predictive modeling.
How important do you think mathematics is for the fruitful development of novel statistical methods?
Deep mathematical results are often the sources for new statistical methodology. For
example, the lasso and other sparse shrinkage techniques were inspired by two fundamental
theoretical achievements: Stein’s shrinkage estimation and Donoho and Johnstone’s pioneering work on wavelet thresholding.
In your 2008 Science Watch interview, you said: “The current variable selection methods
often assume some strong model structures. We need new methodology and theory to
help remove such rigid assumptions.” Has any work been done in that direction? Are
there any applications of such variable selection in the nonparametric context?
There have been some recent papers discussing the use of penalization methods for variable
selection in semiparametric models, such as varying coefficient models, partially linear
models and generalized additive models.
What does winning the Tweedie New Researcher Award mean to you?
It is a tremendous honor for me to receive the Tweedie Award. I will take this award as
encouragement to continue doing good research.
Richard Tweedie mentored and encouraged young colleagues. Who have your mentors
been, and how have they encouraged you?
I have been very fortunate to learn a great deal from my mentors: Trevor Hastie, Rob
Tibshirani, Brad Efron, Xiaotong Shen and Yuhong Yang. They gave me strong support
and important career development advice.
Who would be the guests at your ideal dinner party, and why?
Let me borrow a phrase from Efron. The ideal statistician guest would be R. A. Fisher in the
twenty-first century, because I would like to hear what Fisher would say about contemporary
statistics. For a non-statistician guest I’d pick Charlie Chaplin, the best comic actor ever
and one of the greatest minds in the twentieth century. “The Great Dictator” is a timeless
classic.
IMS Editors
IMS Journals and Publications
Annals of Statistics: Peter Bühlmann and Tony Cai
http://imstat.org/aos
Annals of Applied Statistics: Bradley Efron, Stephen
Fienberg, Michael Stein, Karen Kafadar &
Samuel Kou
http://imstat.org/aoas
Annals of Probability: Ofer Zeitouni
http://imstat.org/aop
Annals of Applied Probability: Andrew Barbour
http://imstat.org/aap
Statistical Science: Jon Wellner
http://imstat.org/sts
IMS Lecture Notes – Monograph Series
http://imstat.org/publications/lecnotes.htm
IMS Collections
http://imstat.org/publications/
imscollections.htm
NSF-CBMS Regional Conference Series in Probability and Statistics:
http://imstat.org/publications/nsf.htm
IMS Co-sponsored Journals and
Publications
Electronic Journal of Statistics: David Ruppert
http://imstat.org/ejs
Electronic Journal of Probability: Bálint Tóth
http://www.math.washington.edu/~ejpecp
Electronic Communications in Probability:
Timo Seppäläinen
http://www.math.washington.edu/~ejpecp
/ECP/index.php
Current Index to Statistics: George Styan
http://www.statindex.org
Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics:
Richard Levine
http://www.amstat.org/publications/jcgs
Statistics Surveys: Lutz Dümbgen
http://imstat.org/ss
Probability Surveys: Geoffrey Grimmett
http://imstat.org/ps
IMS Supported Journals
Annales de l'Institut Henri Poincaré (B): Alice Guionnet
http://imstat.org/aihp
Bayesian Analysis: Herbie Lee
http://ba.stat.cmu.edu
Bernoulli: Richard Davis
http://isi.cbs.nl/bernoulli
Brazilian Journal of Probability and Statistics: Silvia Ferrari
http://imstat.org/bjps
IMS Affiliated Journals
ALEA: Latin American Journal of Probability and Statistics:
Claudio Landim
http://alea.impa.br/english
Probability and Mathematical Statistics: M. Musiela,
J. Rosiński,W. Szczotka, A. Weron & W.A. Woyczyński
http://www.math.uni.wroc.pl/~pms
Other IMS contacts
IMS website: http://imstat.org
Managing Editor: Michael Phelan
phelanm@uci.edu
Production Editor: Patrick Kelly
pkelly@wharton.upenn.edu
4 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
Rick’s Ramblings: Proofiness
Extra-Sensory Pornography and mathematical abuses?
Rick Durrett investigates…
A
Alex Bannykh | ClipartOf.com | #84758
ccording to respected social
psychologist and Cornell emeritus
professor Daryl Bem, undergraduates have “ESP” when it comes to finding
porn. In his experiment, subjects saw two
curtains on a computer screen and had
to guess which of the two had an erotic
picture behind it. They succeeded 53% of
the time, an event with probability < .01 if
the subjects were guessing randomly.
It is not clear what this very weak form
of ESP is good for, but it led to an interesting article in the 21 January issue of Science.
(Some of you may have seen this in the
New York Times or seen Bem on the Colbert
Report.) Typical of stories on math in such
high profile magazines, on page 272 there is
a picture with a translucent head and wavy
lines emanating from it and a picture of
Bayes’ formula as a backdrop. The caption
proclaims, “In the wake of a controversial
paper about ESP, some statisticians are
arguing that social scientists should use statistical methods based on Bayes’ theorem.”
But at the end of the article the writer concludes, “Enthusiasm for Bayesian statistics
has come and gone over the years. They’ve
been used in many fields from astronomy to
clinical trials but have replaced the standard
statistics in only a few.” I guess it is time to
throw the Bayesians in the Old Chemistry
Building at Duke out on their posteriors.
“It doesn’t matter that your thesis is on extra-sensory
perception, you still can’t cite mind-reading in your
references!”
Although the ESP article grabbed
the first two paragraphs, the star of this
column is the book Proofiness: The Dark
Arts of Mathematical Deception by Charles
Seife ($25.95 from Viking Press). I made
the mistake of picking this book one night
when I went to bed and was up half the
night reading the first 200 pages. I have
been collecting probability examples for
many years, but this book showed me a
number of good new ones.
In 2005, anthropologists published a
study in Nature of wrestling, boxing, and
taekwondo matches in the 2004 Olympics.
In these matches one athlete wears red and
the other wears blue (assigned randomly?),
but the contestant in red won roughly 55%
of the time. To explain this, the authors
cited a paper where experimenters put red
bands on zebra finches causing them to act
more dominant. The effect didn’t last. In
the 2008 Olympics blue won more often
than red. If you want an example of the
color blue causing aggression just watch a
Duke–UNC basketball game.
Fitting straight lines to data is always
good for a few laughs. In a 2004 Nature
paper which Seife says was “written by a
motley collection of zoologists, geographers,
and public health experts” performance of
men and women in the 100-meter dash
was analyzed. The surprising conclusion
was that women would surpass men in
2156, completing the race in a mere 8
seconds. Given that the prediction will not
come true for 140 years we cannot say for
certain that it is false. However, for a 1992
study of men’s and women’s times in the
marathon the game is already over. Based
on a similar analysis they predicted that in
1998 women would first beat men and in a
time of 2:01:59. However the women’s gold
medal in the 2000 Olympics was awarded
for a time of 2:23:14. The male gold medal
winner was 13 minutes faster but still 8
minutes short of the predicted time. If one
fits exponentials instead of straight lines the
results become more sensible.
Some of the stories are sad. In 1983 the
Air Force commissioned a study to calculate
the risk that the new space shuttle launch
system would explode during launch. They
came up with a figure of 1/35. This number
was unacceptably large so NASA disregarded the study and instead relied on “the
judgment of its engineers” to produce an
estimate of 1 in 100,000. This small probability was more comforting… until January
28, 1986, when Challenger exploded on the
twenty-fifth shuttle launch.
The book has a number of other
examples, such as the tight linear relationship between the deficit and the number of
brain tumors. Depending on your politics
you can jeer at Bush manipulating the data
in support of No Child Left Behind or at Al
Gore for ignoring some inconvenient truths
in his analysis of global warming.
Of course, not all of the material in the
book is new. One finds the familiar stories
of exit polls, the Literary Digest poll, and
the sad story of Sally Clark convicted of
murder due to the fact that having two children die of what the British call “cot death”
is a 73 million-to-one shot. However, even
in these familiar stories there are details I
did not know, and Seife continues with
the stories of the Truman versus Dewey
election, hanging chads in Florida, and subprime mortgages. The last three stories don’t
involve much math beyond arithmetic, but
they are still interesting to read.
All in all the book almost lives up to
the hype on its cover: “Bad math is being
used to bring down government officials
and to elect new ones in their place, to
convict innocent people or to acquit guilty
ones, and to fix the outcomes of future elections. In short, bad math is undermining
democracy.”
April/May . 2011
IMS Bulletin . 5
Statistician ranked as fourth best job
North American jobs website CareerCast.com has published its
2011 Jobs Rated report, and readers may not be surprised to learn
that they ranked statistician as the fourth best job of 2011. Coming
in after software engineer, mathematician and actuary, statistician
beats 195 other jobs. (You may consider yourself fortunate not to
be a roustabout on an oil rig—rated the worst job for the second
year running. Though if any readers are also working as roustabouts, please write and tell us!)
According to the website, “In recent years, the job market has
increasingly rewarded math whizzes [sic] at the expense of less technical professionals. Actuary, mathematician and accountant have all
ranked among the best jobs in America by offering a pleasant work
environment, good salary and healthy job security. But in 2011, as
the emergence of specialized technologies creates new industries,
landing the year’s best job requires not just skill with numbers, but
a strong knowledge of computers too.”
The top four jobs, with their overall scores and average incomes,
are
1. Software Engineer (score: 60.00; income: $87,140.00)
2. Mathematician (score: 73.00; income: $94,178.00)
3. Actuary (score: 123.00; income: $87,204.00)
4. Statistician (score: 129.00; income: $73,208.00)
“Probabilist” is not listed as one of the 200 possible jobs (but
then again, neither is chef, or graphic designer—this list is not
exhaustive).
CareerCast.com explain how they determined the top 200 jobs
of 2011. “In order to quantify and rank the many different aspects
of all 200 jobs listed in the 2011 Jobs Rated report, researchers
reviewed various critical aspects of each profession to identify general categories that are inherent to every job. These were categorized
into five ‘core criteria’: environment, income, outlook, stress and
physical demands.” Details about the methodology are listed at
http://www.careercast.com/jobs-rated/2011-jobs-rated-methodology
Continuing a recent trend, a majority of the jobs that rank
in the top 10 this year require proficiency in math, science or
technology, and all of them require higher education or specialized
training. There are 1,724 jobs in US and Canada listed with the
keyword “statistician” at the time of writing. Someone is hiring…
Do you think you have the best job? Would you advise your
kids to follow a career in statistics? What would you be doing if you
weren’t doing this? What do you think is the best job? Write in and
tell us! e bulletin@imstat.org
Association for Women in Math offers travel grants
The next deadline for the AWM/NSF Travel Grant is May 1, 2011. The Association for Women in Mathematics travel program supports
these opportunities for women:
1 Travel Grants in mathematics, for women mathematicians attending mathematics conferences.
2 Travel Grants for women mathematicians attending a mathematics education research conference.
3 Travel Grants for women mathematics education researchers attending a mathematics conference.
For complete eligibility and application details please visit http://www.awm-math.org/travelgrants.html. All applications are now submitted via an online system.
The Travel Grant Program is sponsored by the National Science Foundation Division of Mathematical Sciences (DMS).
Please consider taking advantage of this opportunity yourself, if you are eligible, and encourage your eligible colleagues to apply.
Association for Women in Mathematics
11240 Waples Mill Rd., Suite 200
Fairfax, VA 22030
t 703-934-0163 x213
f 703-359-7562
e Jennifer Lewis jennifer@awm-math.org
6 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
COPSS Fisher Lecture: C. F. Jeff Wu
Michael Newton, Chair of the COPSS Fisher
Lecture Committee, and Hugh Chipman,
Professor of Mathematics and Statistics,
Acadia University, write:
The 2011 Committee of Presidents of
Statistical Societies (COPSS) has selected
C.F. Jeff Wu, Professor and Coca Cola
Chair in Engineering Statistics at Georgia
Institute of Technology, to deliver the Fisher
Lecture at the Joint Statistics Meetings in
Miami.
Wu’s research contributions span the full
range of statistics, from theory to application, and touch many applied domains,
from sample surveys to nanotechnology.
They are notable for their combination of
novelty, technical strength, and far reaching
vision. He has made especially significant
contributions to experimental design. As
one of his supporters wrote, “In view of
Professor Wu’s contribution to design of
experiments, it is particularly fitting for him
to deliver a lecture that honors R.A. Fisher,
commonly regarded as father of the modern
theory of experimental design.’’
Wu was born in Taiwan and received his
BS degree in mathematics from National
Taiwan University in 1971. After two year’s
compulsory military service, he came to the
US to study at the University of California,
Berkeley and received his PhD in statistics
in 1976. He spent his formative years at the
University of Wisconsin, Madison, from
1977 to 1988; then moved to the University
of Waterloo as the first holder of the GM/
NSERC Chair in Quality and Productivity
in 1988–93. He spent 10 years at the
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, before
joining Georgia Institute of Technology,
where he holds the Coca Cola Chair in
Engineering Statistics in the School of
Industrial and Systems Engineering.
Wu is a highly accomplished scientist and mentor. He is Fellow of four
major societies: the American Statistical
Jeff Wu will deliver his COPSS Fisher Lecture at JSM
on Wednesday August 3 at 4pm. Its title is PostFisherian Experimentation: from Physical to Virtual.
Association, the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics, the Institute for Operations
Research and Management Sciences, and
the American Society for Quality, and
he is an elected member of the National
Academy of Engineering. He has published
one textbook, one research monograph and
more than 145 refereed papers in top journals, and has given distinguished lectures
at numerous universities and conferences
around the world. He was previously recognized with the COPSS Presidents’ award,
and in 2007 received the ASQ’s Shewart
medal for “outstanding technical leadership
in the field of modern quality control”. His
work on applications has received recognition, including the Wilcoxon award and
the Jerome Sacks award. He has served as
the doctoral advisor for 35 PhD students,
29 of whom are now professors or research
scientists at national labs.
Wu is well known for his wide-ranging
research in the planning, analysis, and interpretation of statistical studies. Common
themes in much of his work are the seed
of a substantive scientific problem, the
development of novel statistical models, the
study of relevant statistical properties of the
models, and the development of algorithms
that enable models to be estimated and used
by scientists to optimize processes and make
decisions. Wu has made numerous significant contributions to statistical theory,
including definitive proof of convergence of
the EM algorithm. His work on resampling
methods rekindled research activity in the
jackknife and bootstrap, and their practical
application in surveys. For instance, his
work with Jon Rao on the bootstrap is
now used for almost all Statistics Canada
surveys.
Wu has made significant contributions
to the theory of the design of experiments,
and more broadly to industrial statistics.
He revolutionized experimental design by
developing a modern system based on minimum aberration and nonregular designs.
His work in industrial statistics has been
at the forefront of a US quality revolution
that began in the 1980s. A common theme
is the development of novel designs and
models with a sound statistical basis, which
can be used to efficiently extract maximal
information in industrial problems where
time is short, physical processes are complex, and every experimental run is costly.
The genesis of much of this work comes
from his extensive consulting collaborations
with companies such as AT&T, Ford, GM,
Pfizer and many others.
A hallmark of his industrial work is the
use of statistical design and analysis to solve
a substantive applied problem. This pattern
continues to be evident in recent work
that utilizes ideas from Taguchi’s robust
parameter design to optimize the synthesis
of nanostructures. His work on nanomaterials illustrates the type of research embodied
by Fisher: close collaboration with scientific
researchers, development of novel statistical
methodology for the collection and analysis
of data, and informed decision making in
the engineering process. These contributions
mark Wu as an innovator in the Fisher style
and make him a worthy choice to deliver
the lecture named in Fisher’s honor.
April/May . 2011
IMS Bulletin . 7
Sir Adrian Smith: a personal tribute
David Spiegelhalter writes: Recently
knighted for public services and higher
education, Sir Adrian Smith has made
extraordinary contributions to international
statistics, and the academic and scientific
life of the UK. Adrian grew up in Devon in
the south-west corner of England, in a fading seaside town that had seen better days,
but this did not prevent him from going
to Cambridge to study mathematics. His
PhD was with Dennis Lindley at University
College London during the exciting political days of 1968 to 1971, which were also
exciting times for Bayesian statistics. Out of
his thesis came the hugely-influential 1972
paper Bayes Estimates for the Linear Model
by Lindley and Smith, which really put
hierarchical models on the map.
In 1971 he became a Research Fellow in
Mathematics in Keble College Oxford, and
that’s where our paths first crossed as I was
one of his first students, being 18 and also
from Devon. The Oxford system requires
college fellows to give tutorials and so a
small group of us were privileged to experience Adrian’s informal approach to tuition,
which seemed to mainly involve drinking
sherry while arguing with increasing
volubility about the appropriate solutions to
problems. This in spite of his medieval role
of “Moral Tutor” to his students.
His enthusiasm for vigorous, if not violent, debate about the underlying principles
of statistics—at that time he was translating
de Finetti’s Theory of Probability—inspired
me to continue studying the subject in spite
of the paralysing dullness of the Oxford
second-year syllabus, and his electrifying
third-year course on decision theory put me
on a career course from which I have not
wavered.
In 1974 Adrian returned to UCL and I
followed as his second PhD student—there
would be 50 more. This was a challenging
and sometimes confrontational time in
statistics: Dennis Lindley, Philip Dawid
and Adrian at UCL and David Cox at
Imperial brought the inter-collegiate
statistics seminars to life. In 1977 Adrian
got the chair at Nottingham at the tender
age of 29, where he stayed for 13 years,
nurturing many Bayesian researchers, and
being instrumental in establishing with José
Bernardo the Valencia Bayesian conferences.
These started in 1979 on a small scale, but
soon developed the reputation for hard
academic discourse followed by, if anything,
even harder partying, with Adrian in the
forefront of both, although he always managed to remain aloof from the cabaret. He
was at the centre of a wide international
circle of Bayesian enthusiasts, generous
with his encouragement and assistance,
and trainer of a generation of future leaders
around the world.
A sabbatical by Al Gelfand to
Nottingham gave rise to one of the most
influential papers in modern statistics,
“Sampling-based approaches to calculating marginal densities” in JASA, 1990.
Suddenly everyone was sampling everything, and the whole of Bayesian statistics
lurched into the modern era and spread its
influence through topic after topic. This
coincided with Adrian’s move to Imperial
College where he stayed between 1990 and
1998, during which the long-awaited (especially by the publisher) Bayesian Statistics by
Bernardo and Smith finally arrived, and he
served as President of the Royal Statistical
Society between 1995–1997.
In 1998 he took over as Principal of
Queen Mary College in the University
of London, and oversaw its development
into one of the major UK academic
institutions. And then in 2008 he became
Director General, Science and Research in
the Department of Business, Innovation
and Skills (at least that’s the Department’s
current name, but may change without
warning). This is a post of immense influence but, in contrast to his previous
high-profile positions, is carried out behind
the scenes, making full use of the political
and organisational skills that Adrian has
honed throughout his career. Who knows
what really goes on in the murky depths of
the UK Civil Service, but the fact that the
science budget has been largely protected
from the drastic cuts currently being made
in public expenditure is certainly associated with his presence, and quite possibly
indicates causation.
Adrian has, of course, been rewarded
with honours, medals and Fellowship of the
Royal Society, but I find his public service
particularly impressive. Examples include
a stint on the UK Transplant Management
Committee, Governor of the London
Business School, Governor of St George’s
Hospital Medical School, and countless
Research Council committees and boards.
Most notable perhaps is his report into
Post-14 Maths Education in 2004 which
is repeatedly referenced and is, if anything,
increasing in influence, while his 2007
report on Crime Statistics was a model of
managing to bring disparate opinions to a
common strong conclusion.
Despite all this hobnobbing with the
great and the good, Adrian has retained a
refreshingly sceptical approach to authority.
I have learnt many things from him, but
will always remain in awe of his political
skills, and his mischievous delight at a
brewing conflict.
Adrian Smith as the COPSS Fisher Lecturer in 2003
8 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
Obituary: Igor Vajda
1942–2010
Igor Vajda, Principal Researcher at the
Institute of Information Theory and
Automation (ÚTIA) of the Academy of
Sciences of the Czech Republic in Prague,
and a leading figure in the field of information-theoretic statistical inference, passed
away unexpectedly on May 2, 2010, after
a short illness. He was born on October
20, 1942, in Martin, Czechoslovakia. After
attending elementary and secondary school
in Slovakia, he graduated in mathematics
at Czech Technical University (CTU) in
Prague in 1965, and received Candidate
of Science and Doctor of Science degrees
from Charles University in 1968 and 1990,
respectively, with specializations in probability, statistics and mathematical informatics.
He had been a key researcher at ÚTIA since
1965 and held a teaching position at CTU
since 1969. For many years he was head of
the Department of Stochastic Informatics of
ÚTIA and served on the Scientific Boards
of both ÚTIA and the Faculty of Electrical
Engineering of CTU.
Although Igor Vajda had little opportunity to travel before 1989, apart from a
one-year stay in Moscow in the 1960s and
a two-year teaching appointment in Cairo
in the 1970s, he developed many contacts
abroad, especially in Western Europe, after
the political changeover in Czechoslovakia
in 1989. He held many research grants
since 1991, and vigorously cooperated
in research with colleagues in Austria,
Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany,
Hungary, Spain and the USA in the period
1991–2010.
Igor Vajda was a passionate researcher,
always exploring new ideas. He early
recognized the meaning of different types of
distances between distributions in information theory and mathematical statistics. His
results were respected by the scientific community at large and influenced the research
orientation of many of his younger colleagues. In his scientific work he continued
the traditional Prague school of information
theory which dates back to the early 1950s.
One of his major research directions
was the investigation of f-divergences Df
(P||Q)= ∫q f (p/q)d µ of distributions P and
Q with densities p = dP/d µ and q = dQ/d µ,
and their statistical applications. In early
papers he studied the relations between
f-divergences and variational distance, the
approximation, monotonicity, topological
properties of f-divergences and their minimization under constraints. Of particular
interest to him was the subclass of power
divergences. A first systematic theory of
f-divergences was presented in the book
Convex Statistical Distances by F. Liese and
I. Vajda (Teubner, 1986), with applications
to hypothesis testing, minimum distance
estimation, and random processes.
Igor Vajda’s book Theory of Statistical
Inference and Information (Kluwer, 1989)
(a first version of which was published
in Slovak language in 1982) provides a
comprehensive treatment of the theory of
statistical inference and information. It is
unique in the field and contains a wealth
of research results. This book has become
an indispensable source of reference for
researchers in the field and a source of
inspiration for much research carried out
since its appearance.
Igor Vajda used special f-divergences
such as χα-distances and Hellinger integrals
to establish lower or asymptotic lower
bounds in estimation and testing problems,
thereby generalizing the Cramér-Rao
bound and the theorems of Chernoff and
Stein. The extension of the likelihood ratio
Igor Vajda
statistic to divergence-based statistics for
testing composite hypotheses was also the
subject of many papers of which Igor Vajda
was the author or a co-author.
In order to compare the empirical
^
distribution Pn with the theoretical distribution Pϑ from a parametric model, one has
to turn to a sequence of partitions of the
sample space. Igor Vajda and co-authors
characterized the suitable speed of refining,
and studied sequences of partitions generated by the quantile function.
Another favorite topic of Igor Vajda,
closely related to the above one, was
divergence-based estimation and testing
in mathematical statistics. He used the
^
distance Df ( Pn||Pϑ) between the empirical
^
distribution Pn and the true distribution
Pϑ to introduce the minimum divergence
^
^
estimator ϑn = arg minϑ∈Θ Df ( Pn||Pϑ) and to
^
construct the statistic Tn=minϑ∈ΘDf ( Pn||Pϑ)
for testing a parametric hypothesis and for
goodness-of-fit tests. He and co-authors
were able to show that f-divergence based
estimates have similar properties as the
maximum likelihood estimator. These
results, as well as the efficiency in the
Pitman and Bahadur sense and large deviation results on tests based on Tn, were the
subject of many papers of which Igor Vajda
was the author or a co-author.
April/May . 2011
Arguments that are employed to establish the consistency of minimum divergence
estimators were used by Igor Vajda to formulate necessary and sufficient conditions
for the consistency of M-estimators and to
construct robust estimators in regression
models.
Igor Vajda recognized early on the
importance of the Barron distribution
estimator, originally introduced for the
consistent nonparametric estimation of an
unknown probability distribution in the
sense of information divergence and variational distance. In a series of papers, he and
co-authors proved many other results concerning this estimator, such as consistency
in chi-square divergence, and applied it to
parametric point estimation and density
estimation as well.
Starting 2001, Igor Vajda developed
a general theory of goodness-of-fit tests
based on spacings from the viewpoint of
disparity statistics. In joint work he showed
that essentially all spacings-based statistics
are asymptotically equivalent to a disparity
statistic and proved limit laws for this class
of statistics, with special attention to power
divergence statistics, thereby obtaining
closed-form expressions for the asymptotic
parameters.
In recent papers Igor Vajda studied the
Bregman distance and estimators based on
it, which provide the flexibility to find a
compromise between efficiency and robustness of estimators.
Igor Vajda also worked in applied areas
such as the statistical analysis of optimal
investments, financial mathematics, biostatistics, and stochastic systems and networks.
Igor Vajda was an author or co-author
of four monographs and more than 100
publications in renowned international
IMS Bulletin . 9
journals. He had more than 300 officially
registered citations. Although he worked
with many people during his long scientific
career, we mention some of those with
whom he co-authored most of the research
described above and published since
1991: A. Berlinet, L. Györfi, F. Liese, M.
Menéndez, D. Morales, F. Österreicher, L.
Pardo, and E. van der Meulen. His recent
collaborators include M. Broniatowski, P.
Harremoës, T. Hobza, M. C. Pardo, and W.
Stummer.
His work was awarded, among other
distinctions, the Prize of the Czech
Academy of Sciences, the Jacob Wolfowitz
Prize, the Medal of the Merits of the First
Degree from the Faculty of Nuclear and
Physical Engineering of CTU and several
Annual Prizes awarded by the Director of
ÚTIA for the best paper of the year, the
last one in 2007. In November 2010, at a
special Colloquium held in his memory at
Prague, Igor Vajda was honored posthumously with the Bolzano Medal from the
Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic.
The high quality of his scientific results
and the intensity of his international
cooperation are expressed by the fact
that since 1991 Igor Vajda obtained six
research grants from the Czech National
Grant Agency, one from the European
Union (Copernicus), and one from the
NSF of the USA. He participated as a
co-investigator in several other grants.
Since 1990 Igor Vajda was a Member, and
since 2001 a Fellow, of the IEEE. He was a
visiting professor at Katholieke Universiteit
Leuven, Complutense Universidad
Madrid, Université de Montpellier, and M.
Hérnandez Universidad, Alicante.
Igor Vajda supervised many diploma
projects and guided several PhD students
both at home and abroad. He was a co-editor of the journals Kybernetika, Problems of
Control and Information Theory, Applications
of Mathematics, Statistics and Decisions,
Revista Matematica Complutense, Journal of
Statistical Planning and Inference, and Test.
Igor Vajda loved his native land Slovakia
and visited it regularly throughout his life.
His ashes are buried in Moravia, at the
historic cemetery of Střílky, not far from
Brno. He is survived by his wife Zdenka,
his two daughters Tereza and Veronika, and
four grandchildren.
Igor Vajda was a man of many ambitions and achieved a lot in his life. He
worked tirelessly and inspired many. He
enjoyed working with others. With him we
lost a great friend and fine colleague. We all
owe him much, miss him, and will honor
his memory.
Martin Janzura, ÚTIA, Prague
Friedrich Liese, University of Rostock
Edward van der Meulen, K. U. Leuven
Joint Statistical Meetings
in Miami Beach, FL
http://amstat.org/meetings/jsm/2011/
Online program available
now. Registration
and housing
reservations
open April 28.
10 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
IMS Elections 2011: candidate information
President Elect Nominee (one candidate)
Hans R. Künsch
Professor, Department of Mathematics,
Seminar für Statistik, ETH Zürich
Education: PhD, ETH Zürich, 1980; Dipl.
Math., ETH Zürich, 1975
Research Interests
• Spatial statistics and random fields:
geostatistics, intrinsic models, image analysis, space-time models
• Time series analysis: long range dependence, bootstrap methods
for dependent data, general state-space models
• Environmental modeling: soil, climate, aquatic systems
• Stochastic simulation
• Robust statistics and model selection
Previous Service to the Profession
• Member Committee to Select Editors 2006–09 (chair 2008–09)
• Member Committee on Publications, 2002–05 (chair 2004–05)
• Member Council, 2003–2005
• Co-editor, Annals of Statistics, 1998–2000 (with Jim Berger)
• Associate Editor, Annals of Statistics, 1987–91 and 1995–97
Brief Statement
The IMS plays an important and influential role in the development of statistics and probability through its journals and other
publications, its meetings, the awards and honors it confers, and
through the cooperation with other scientific societies. It has dealt
successfully with a number of challenges like expanding the scope
of our publications, becoming a truly international association and
taking the necessary steps to preserve the financial basis for the
future. I am honored and excited to be nominated for PresidentElect. I feel I still have to learn a lot, but I will seek the support and
input from the Executive Committee, the Council, and the various
committees in order to continue the success story of IMS and keep
it going strong.
Web
http://stat.ethz.ch/~kuensch/
Council Nominees (ten candidates for five places on Council)
Mathias Drton
Associate Professor, Statistics, The University of Chicago
wonderful recent additions to the society’s journals, to continue the
great mentorship the society provides to junior researchers, and to
strengthen the society’s international presence.
Education
Web
Ph.D., University of Washington, Seattle,
U.S.A., 2004; Diplom, Universität
Augsburg, Germany, 2000; DEA, Université
Paul Sabatier, Toulouse, France, 1999
http://www.stat.uchicago.edu/~drton/
Research Interests
• Graphical models
• Algebraic statistics
Previous Service to the Profession
• Associate Editor, Annals of Statistics, 2008–
• Associate Editor, JRSS B, 2007–11
• IMS Special Lectures Committee, Chair, 2011
• IMS Special Lectures Committee, Member, 2009–2010
Brief Statement
The IMS has been my academic home ever since I joined as a
graduate student. Through its outstanding journals, meetings, and
guidance to young researchers it has also played an important role
in the professional development of many of my academic friends.
If elected to the Council, I will work to further promote the
Sandrine Dudoit
Professor, Division of Biostatistics and
Department of Statistics, University of
California, Berkeley
Education
BSc, Department of Mathematics and
Statistics, Carleton University, Ottawa,
Canada, 1992; MSc, Department of
Mathematics and Statistics, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada,
1994; PhD, Department of Statistics, University of California,
Berkeley, 1999
Research Interests
• Loss-based estimation with cross-validation: parametric and
non-parametric density estimation and regression, variable selection
• Multiple hypothesis testing
April/May . 2011
• Exploratory data analysis
• Statistical computing
• Analysis of high-throughput microarray and sequencing data
Previous Service to the Profession
• Associate Editor, Annals of Applied Statistics, Summer 2006–
Present
• Associate Editor, Biology Direct, Spring 2006–Present
• Associate Editor, Biometrics, July 1, 2009 – December 1, 2009
• Section Editor, BMC Bioinformatics - Transcriptome Analysis, Fall
2009–Present
• Associate Editor, BMC Bioinformatics, Spring 2005–Fall 2009
• Associate Editor, Genomics, Summer 2006–Summer 2010
• Associate Editor, IEEE/ACM Transactions on Computational
Biology and Bioinformatics, Spring 2004–Present
• Associate Editor, Journal of Statistical Software, Fall 2005–Fall
2006
• Associate Editor, Statistical Applications in Genetics and
Molecular Biology, Spring 2002–Present
• Western North American Region (WNAR) of the International
Biometric Society (IBS), Regional Committee Representative,
2004–2006
Brief Statement
If elected to the IMS Council, I would promote the IMS’s involvement in the following four areas.
(i) Dissemination and sound application of statistical methods to other
fields. Statistical methods have become an integral part of data
analysis in fields as diverse as astronomy, genomics, and marketing.
Unfortunately, data analysts, who often lack proper statistical training, routinely reinvent the wheel, develop expedient fixes, or apply
sophisticated methods without understanding the assumptions
underlying their validity. I would support efforts (e.g., courses,
conferences, publications) to bridge the gap between methodological and applied aspects of statistics and enhance interdisciplinary
research and training. I would also attempt to raise awareness for
the value of our profession by developing connections between the
IMS and homologous organizations from other disciplines.
(ii) Statistical computing. I would promote research and training
efforts in statistical computing, as this underrated aspect of our
profession is a key link between statistical theory and application.
(iii) Reproducible research. While the ability to reproduce research
findings is a rarely disputed principle, it is seldom achieved in
practice. I would therefore promote the practice of reproducible
research, through, for instance, the use of integrated, dynamic
statistical documents that include text, code, data, and software.
(iv) Open access electronic publishing. In rapidly evolving and
IMS Bulletin . 11
increasingly interdisciplinary research and teaching environments, it
is essential to have timely and seamless access to research findings in
a wide range of disciplines. I would support open access electronic
publishing as a vehicle for high-quality and efficient review and the
immediate, broad, and economical dissemination and mining of
research findings.
Web
http://www.stat.berkeley.edu/~sandrine
Steve Evans
Professor, Statistics and Mathematics (joint
appointment), University of California at
Berkeley
Education
PhD, University of Cambridge, 1987; B.Sc.
(Hons I), University of Sydney, 1983
Research Interests
• Random matrices and probability on algebraic structures
• Random trees and tree-valued stochastic processes
• Measure-valued stochastic processes
• Biodemography and modeling of aging and mortality
• Phylogenetics and phylogenetics-based methods in
metagenomics
• Phylogenetic methods in historical linguistics
Previous Service to the Profession
• Associate Editor for Stochastic Processes and their Applications
• Associate Editor for Annals of Probability
• Co-chair, year on stochastic analysis, MSRI, Berkeley
• Scientific committee for Seminar on Stochastic Processes
• Associate Editor for Probability Theory and Related Fields
• Core Editor for Probability Surveys
• IMS Fellowship Committee member
Brief Statement
To paraphrase one of my Berkeley colleagues, academic Statistics
is in danger of becoming a run-down inner-city because of flight
to the suburbs: that is, increasing amounts of the interesting and
innovative work in probability and statistics is being done by
researchers who don’t think of themselves as “statisticians”, don’t
have positions in university departments of statistics, and don’t
see the IMS as being the professional society that caters to their
interests. If elected, my goal is to make the IMS publications and
meetings more appealing to this expanding group while enhancing
their quality and financial viability.
Web
http://www.stat.berkeley.edu/users/evans
12 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
Council nominees continued
James Allen (Jim) Fill
Professor, Applied Mathematics and
Statistics, The Johns Hopkins University
Education
Ph.D., Statistics, University of Chicago,
1980; M.S., Statistics, University of
Chicago, 1979; B.S., Mathematics,
Statistics, University of Illinois, 1976;
Summa Cum Laude; Highest Distinction in Mathematics; Highest
Distinction in Statistics; Minor: Computer Science
Research Interests
• Probability
• Stochastic processes (especially Markov chains)
• Analysis of algorithms
• Random structures and algorithms
Previous Service to the Profession
• Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Theoretical Probability, 2006–present;
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Co-Editor-in-Chief, 2004–2005; Member of Editorial Board,
2000–2003
Associate Editor, Annals of Applied Probability, 1994–2000,
2006–present
Associate Editor, Electronic Journal of Probability and Electronic
Communications in Probability, 2000–present
Member, Program Committee, World Congress in Probability
and Statistics (held in Singapore), 2008
Member, IMS Committee on Fellows, 2005–2007
Member, AMS-IMS-SIAM Summer Research Conferences in
the Mathematical Sciences Selection Committee, 1999–2002
Member, three annual Screening Panels for Statistics and
Probability Program, National Science Foundation, 1998–2002
Member, IMS Program Advisory Committee, 1990–1992
Member, various other program committees, including three
annual Workshops on Analytic Algorithmics and Combinatorics
(ANALCO), 2006–2008; Second Colloquium on Algorithms,
Trees, Combinatorics and Probabilities, 2002; Eighth Seminar
on the Mathematical Analysis of Algorithms, 2002
Organizer, DIMACS Workshop on Markov Chain Monte
Carlo: Synthesizing Theory and Practice, 2007
Co-organizer, Markov Chains and Random Algorithms, Cornell
University, 2004
Organizer, Workshop on Monte Carlo Markov Chains, IMS
Directions in Probability Workshop, 1993
Brief Statement
One of the greatest strengths of the IMS is its journals. I hope
that my many years of experience as an editor and associate editor
will bring IMS Council a useful perspective. I look forward also to
helping IMS to provide rich opportunities for all members of the
probability and statistics community, especially students and other
young researchers, women, and minorities. Finally, I will work to
maintain and strengthen cooperation by IMS with professional
societies and other organizations around the world.
Web
http://www.uoguelph.ca/~pkim
Paul Gustafson
Professor, Department of Statistics,
University of British Columbia
Education
Ph.D., Carnegie Mellon University, 1994;
M.Sc., University of British Columbia,
1991; B.Sc., University of British
Columbia, 1990
Research Interests
• Bayesian methods
• Biostatistical and epidemiological applications
• Partially identified models
Previous Service to the Profession
• Editor, Canadian Journal of Statistics, 2007–2009
• Associate Editor: Canadian Journal of Statistics (2001–2006,
2010– ), Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference (2001–
2006), Lifetime Data Analysis (2005–2006), Statistics in Medicine
(2005–2006).
• President, Biostatistics Section, Statistical Society of Canada,
2006–2007
• ISBA Committees: Savage Award (2004–2005, 2009–2010),
Mitchell Award (2008), Elections Committee (2008).
• SSC Committees: Robillard Award (2004–2006), Elections
Committee (2001–2004, 2007)
Brief Statement
To date I have been a quiet member of IMS, but have been active
in roles with other societies. I would look forward to learning more
about the society and contributing to its success. A central challenge in today’s research environment is embracing interdisciplinarity while still fostering the identity of our discipline. I perceive that
the IMS has an important role to play in this regard.
Web
http://www.stat.ubc.ca/~gustaf
April/May . 2011
Byeong U. Park
Professor, Department of Statistics, Seoul
National University
Education
Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley,
1987; M.S., Seoul National University,
1984; B.S., Seoul National University, 1982
Research Interests
• Nonparametric function estimation
• Semiparametric inference
• Functional data analysis
• High-dimensional models
• Machine learning
Previous Service to the Profession
• Associate Editor of the Annals of Statistics, 2007–2009
• Chair, Local Organizing Committee, The 1st IMS Asia pacific
Rim Meeting, 2007–2009
• Co–Chair, IMS Committee on Asia and Pacific Rim Meeting,
2009–present
• Member, IMS Committee on Asia and Pacific Rim Meetings,
2007–2009
• Member, IMS Committee on Nominations, 2004–2005,
2007–2008
• Editorial Board, IMS Lecture Notes and Monograph Series,
2008–2009
• Associate Editor of Journal of Nonparametric Statistics, 2003–
present
• Associate Editor of Annals of Institute of Statistical Mathematics,
2006–present
• Vice President, the Korean Statistical Society, 2010–present
• Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Korean Statistical Society, 2008–
present
Brief Statement
Advances in information technology have given new challenges
to statistics and probability. While furthering its traditional roles
in fostering the development of mathematical statistics and probability through high quality scholarly publications and scientific
conferences, the IMS should play a central role in promoting
statistics and probability in many emerging interdisciplinary areas
facing the new challenges. In order to strengthen its position as
the leading international society for statisticians and probabilists
in the age of globalization, the IMS also needs to make a genuine
effort to become truly global and increase its presence worldwide
significantly, particularly in under-represented regions with growing
IMS Bulletin . 13
research communities of statistics and probability.
Web
http://stat.snu.ac.kr/theostat/BUPark.htm
Sonia Petrone
Associate Professor of Statistics, Department
of Decision Sciences, Bocconi University,
Milano
Education
PhD in Statistics, University of Trento,
1989; M.Sc, Bocconi University, Milano,
1985
Research Interests
• Bayesian inference and foundations
• Bayesian nonparametrics
• Mixtures and latent variables models
• State space models
Previous Service to the Profession
• Member of the Board of Directors of the International Society
of Bayesian Analysis (ISBA), 2002–2004 and 2008–2010
• Editor of Bayesian Analysis
• Member of various Programme Committees, including the
ISBA 2010 World Meeting and the series of workshops on
Bayesian Nonparametrics and on Bayesian Inference for
Stochastic Processes
Brief Statement
IMS has a central role for probability and statistics. I believe it is
important to continue the effort in crucial challenges: strengthening
the interaction with other scientific communities and applied fields,
while keeping the identity and solidity of our disciplines; enhancing
the international role of IMS and in particular the collaboration
with emerging countries; continuing to pursue electronic access to
publications, journals, and books; promoting international but also
local educational programs, research, and researchers mobility, in
particular in developing countries; keeping attention for diversity.
Preserving the high quality of the IMS activities is the underlying,
crucial point in addressing these challenges. I would be honored to
serve for IMS and work towards these goals.
Web
http://didattica.unibocconi.eu/docenti/cv.php?rif=48897&cognome=P
ETRONE&nome=SONIA
14 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
Council nominees continued
Christian P. Robert
Professor of Statistics, Department of
Mathematics for Decision, Université Paris
Dauphine
Education
Habilitation in Statistics, Université Pierre
et Marie Curie, 1991; PhD in Statistics,
Université de Rouen, 1987; Master in
Mathematics, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, 1985; Master in
Statistics and Economics, ENSAE, 1985
Research Interests
• Monte Carlo theory, methodology and application
• Bayesian inference, theory and foundations
• Stochastic modelling
Previous Service to the Profession
• Member of the IMS council 2003–2005
• Editor of JRSS Series B 2006–2009
• Associate editor of the Annals of Statistics 1996–2006
• Member of the IMS committee on Fellows 2004–2006
• Member of the IMS nominating committee 1997
• Member of the Royal Statistical Society research committee
2001–2009
• President of ISBA 2008
Brief Statement
The profession is currently undergoing major changes whose
centrifugal actions could result in a detrimental partition. Through
the promotion of quality publications and meetings, as well as the
inclusion of the peripheral elements at all levels of the IMS, my
priority actions will be towards preserving “unity in diversity”.
Web
http://www.ceremade.dauphine.fr/~xian
Remco van der Hofstad
Professor in Probability, Department of
Mathematics and Computer Science,
Eindhoven University of Technology
Education
PhD in Mathematics, Utrecht University
(The Netherlands), 1997; Master in
Mathematics, Utrecht University (The
Netherlands) 1993
Research Interests
• Random graphs
• Stochastic processes on random graphs
• Statistical mechanics
• Percolation
• Polymer models
• Self-interacting stochastic processes
• Applications of probability in engineering
Previous Service to the Profession
• Referee for many journals
• Associate editor Advances in Applied Probability and Journal in
•
•
•
•
•
Applied Probability
Co-organiser of approximately 15 workshops in Germany,
France, and The Netherlands
Co-organiser Mark Kac Seminar in Probability and Statistical
Physics, the Netherlands 1999–2011
Co-founder of “Young European Probabilists” workshop series
to create a network of young probabilists
Senior Research fellow Eurandom, the European Institute in
Stochastics 2005–2011
As of April 1, 2011: Scientific Director of Eurandom, the
European Institute in Stochastics
External expert Uppsala University
•
Brief Statement
Probability and statistics, both theoretically and applied, are
internationally flourishing. The field is gaining respect both within
the mathematics community (as exemplified by recent international
prizes, such as Fields medals), as well as within the applied sciences
due to its intrinsic multidisciplinary character and its importance in
dealing with complexity, uncertainty and randomness. As a result,
many young scientists find their way into probability and statistics.
These junior scientists face the challenge to establish their own
research profile and network. We as a community can, and in my
opinion should, help them as much as possible in this respect. The
IMS plays a key role in providing opportunities for young as well
as senior researchers in the field. It acts as a central institution to
explain the importance of probability and statistics to the society
at large in dealing with complexity issues. If I am elected, I wish to
help the IMS develop further ideas to increase its visibility to young
researchers and other disciplines.
Web
http://www.win.tue.nl/~rhofstad
April/May . 2011
IMS Bulletin . 15
Qiwei Yao
(2004–2007)
Professor of Statistics, Department of
Statistics, London School of Economics and
Political Science
Education
PhD in Statistics, 1987, Wuhan University,
China; MSc in Statistics, 1984, Southeast
University, China; BSc in Mathematics,
1982, Southeast University, China
Research Interests
• Time series analysis
• Dimension reduction and factor modelling
• Nonparametric regression
• Spatio-temporal modelling
• Financial econometrics
Previous Service to the Profession
• Associate editor of Annals of Statistics (2004– ), Statistica Sinica
(2008–2011), Journal of the Royal Statistical Society (1998–
2002), Journal of Time Series Analysis (2009–2010), Australian
and New Zealand Journal of Statistics (2001–2007), and Sankhya
• Co–Editor of Statistica Sinica (2011– ), Statistics and Its Interface
(2007–2011), and Journal of the Korean Statistical Society
(2008–2010).
• Member of the Research Section Committee of the Royal
Statistical Society (2003–2007), Chairman of the Postgraduate
Training Program Committee of the Royal Statistical Society
(2006–2007), Member of the Board of Directors of the
International Chinese Statistical Association (2003–2006).
Brief Statement
Statistics plays ever-increasingly important role in this modern
information age. We, as statisticians, are presented with many
opportunities with challenges. The IMS can and should play a more
proactive role in promoting cross-fertilization between statistics and
other disciplines while retaining our own identity via advancing the
core statistical methodologies and the associated theory. If elected, I
will work with the colleagues to achieve this goal.
Web
http://stats.lse.ac.uk/q.yao/
don't forget to vote!
https://secure.imstat.org/secure/vote2011/vote2011.asp
16 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
Awards: calls for nominations
Call for Nominations: Tenth Annual Janet L. Norwood Award for outstanding achievement by
a woman in the statistical sciences
Association for Women in Mathematics seeks
Humphreys mentorship prize nominations
The Section on Statistical Genetics and the Department of Biostatistics in the School of
Public Health, University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) are pleased to request nominations for the Tenth Annual Janet L. Norwood Award for Outstanding Achievement by
a Woman in the Statistical Sciences. The award will be conferred on September 14, 2011.
The award recipient will be invited to deliver a lecture at the UAB award ceremony, and
will receive all expenses, the award, and a $5,000 prize.
Eligible individuals are women who have completed their terminal degree, have made
extraordinary contributions and have an outstanding record of service to the statistical sciences, with an emphasis on both their own scholarship and on teaching and leadership of
the field in general and of women in particular and who, if selected, are willing to deliver
a lecture at the award ceremony. For additional details about the award, please visit our
website at http://www.soph.uab.edu/ssg/norwoodaward/aboutaward.
To nominate, please send a full curriculum vitae accompanied by a letter of not
more than two pages in length describing the nature of the candidate’s contributions.
Contributions may be in the area of development and evaluation of statistical methods,
teaching of statistics, application of statistics, or any other activity that can arguably be
said to have advanced the field of statistical science. Self-nominations are acceptable. Please
send nominations to David B. Allison, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor & Head, Section on
Statistical Genetics e dallison@uab.edu. The deadline is Friday, June 24. Electronic submissions of nominations are encouraged. The winner will be announced by July 1.
The Executive Committee of the
Association for Women in Mathematics
has established a prize in memory of M.
Gweneth Humphreys to recognize outstanding mentorship activities. This prize
will be awarded annually to a mathematics
teacher (female or male) who has encouraged female undergraduate students to pursue mathematical careers and/or the study
of mathematics at the graduate level. The
award is open to all regardless of nationality
and citizenship. Nominees must be living at
the time of their nomination.
The 2012 Humphreys Award will
be presented at the Joint Mathematics
Meetings in Boston, MA, January 2012.
Details of the nomination materials are
at http://sites.google.com/site/awmmath/
programs/humphreys-award. The deadline is
April 30, 2011.
Nominations sought for the Marvin Zelen Leadership Award
in Statistical Science
The Distinguished Alum Award at Harvard School of Public Health
http://biosun1.harvard.edu/events/awards/zelen/index.html
The Department of Biostatistics at the Harvard School of Public
Health has named Manning Feinleib, M.D., Dr.P.H., Professor
Emeritus of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
in the Department of Epidemiology, as the recipient of the 2011
Distinguished Alum Award. Dr. Feinleib graduated from Harvard
School of Public Health’s Department of Biostatistics in 1966 with
his Dr.P.H. Dr. Feinleib will present a lecture during the fall of the
2011–2012 academic year at the Harvard School of Public Health.
The lecture date will be announced once determined.
Each year, the Distinguished Alum Award is awarded to an
individual in government, industry, or academia, who by virtue
of applications to support of research, methodology and theory,
significant organizational responsibility, and teaching has impacted
the theory and practice of statistical science. The overall career of
the individual is considered with an emphasis on how the nominee
has used their experience to bring out the best in life with research
and academics. The award recipient will be invited to deliver a lecture on their career and life beyond the Department at the Harvard
School of Public Health, for the primary benefit of our students.
The recipient will also be presented with a plaque.
The Department of Biostatistics at the Harvard School of Public
Health named Richard Landis, PhD as the recipient of the 2011
Marvin Zelen Leadership Award in Statistical Science. Dr. Landis
is a professor in the Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology
at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine as well as
a professor of statistics at the Wharton School at the University
of Pennsylvania. He will deliver a lecture on May 20 at Harvard
University. This annual award, supported by colleagues, friends and
family, was established to honor Dr. Marvin Zelen’s long and distinguished career as a statistician and his major role in shaping the
field of biostatistics. The award recognizes an individual in government, industry, or academia, who by virtue of his/her outstanding
leadership has greatly impacted the theory and practice of statistical
science. While individual accomplishments are considered, the most
distinguishing criterion is the awardees contribution to the creation
of an environment in which statistical science and its applications
have flourished. The award recipient will deliver a public lecture on
statistical science at the Harvard School of Public Health and will
be presented with a citation and an honorarium.
http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/biostats/events/awards/alum/
April/May . 2011
IMS Bulletin . 17
Medallion Lecture preview: Itai Benjamini
Itai Benjamini is one of the IMS Medallion Lecturers at the 35th Conference on Stochastic
Processes and their Applications, held in Oaxaca, Mexico, from June 19–25, 2011. He says,
“I’m a mathematician working at the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel. I grew up in
Jerusalem and did all my academic studies at the Hebrew University there. Following
graduation in 1992 I did a post-doc at Cornell. Most of my work is in the fields of probability and geometry, and their intersection in particular.”
Photo: Wikimedia Commons / Gengiskanhg
In 1921 George Pólya proved that while simple random walk on
the planar square grid is recurrent, that is returns to the origin
infinitely often almost surely, the simple random walk on the three
dimensional cubic grid is transient, that is, it returns finitely many
times almost surely.
This classic and inspiring theorem can be approached, generalized and made quantitative using several rather different viewpoints.
Ideas from Probability, geometry and analysis have since inspired
a big body of work regarding random walks on graphs and related
fields.
In the talk I will review some recent variations on the theme of
recurrence. In the study of this topic, geometric notions and tools
such as isoperimetric inequalities and transitivity are incorporated
with probabilistic and analytic reasoning. Some further classic
examples include Kesten’s thesis (1959) where he proved that the
return probabilities for simple random walk on a graph decay exponentially if, and only if, the graph satisfies a strong isoperimetric
inequality that is nonamenable; or Varopoulos proving a conjecture
of Kesten, that the only recurrent Infinite Cayley graphs are finite
extensions of the line and the plane. The proof uses a geometric
structure theory combined with an analytic machine.
Among the recent variants we will discuss in the talk are the
following three topics which were studied with several sets of co
authors.
On large finite graph return probabilities are related to mixing
times and to recurrence of graph limits. In recent years, motivated
by physics, random geometries were introduced and studied beyond
perturbations of known spaces. The uniform infinite planar triangulation, which is a graph limit of finite large random triangulations
of the spheres, emerges as a new canonical space. It is still open to
show that the uniform infinite planar triangulation is almost surely
recurrent.
Over the years several natural variants of simple random walk
were introduced, such as random walk in random environment
and self-interacting random walks. Once the simple Markovian set
up of the simple random walk is even slightly modified, the gap
between what we believe and what can actually be proved is rather
dramatic. Here is an example: the balanced excited random walk.
Consider the following random process on the square grid. At first
visit to a site, the first coordinate performs a simple random walk
step. At further visits, it is the second coordinate which performs a
simple random walk step. Is this walk recurrent? What can be said
about the random set of sites in the grid visited by the walk in the
first N steps?
Given a graph, consider the random graph obtained from
the trace of a simple random walk on the graph, consisting of all
vertices visited and edges crossed by the walk. Is this random graph
almost surely a recurrent subgraph?
Left: detail of the mosaic wall patterns at Mitla, an
important Zapotec archeological site in the state of
Oaxaca in Mexico. The site is 27 miles (44 km) from
the city of Oaxaca, the location of the 35th Stochastic Processes and their Applications meeting. Mitla
was the main Zapotec religious center. Its name is
derived from Mictlán, which meant “the place of the
dead”. Mitla is unique among Mesoamerican sites
for the elaborate and intricate mosaic fretwork and
geometric designs that cover tombs, panels, friezes
and even entire walls. These mosaics are made with
small, finely-cut and polished stone pieces that have
been fitted together without the use of mortar.
[Taken from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitla ]
18 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
Terence’s Stuff: Simulation
Terry Speed is
stimulated by
simulations this
month, and regrets
that he came late to
the Monte Carlo party.
E
dith Piaf said rien, Frank Sinatra
had a few, too few to mention, but
I have several. One is not paying
attention to the world of stochastic simulation, until it was almost too late. For most
of my career, simulation was something
people did when they couldn’t do the
math. Duh. Simulation is still something
people do when they can’t do the math. It
took me a while to get from the first to the
second viewpoint here. In my beginning,
there were formulae: simple (mean, SD),
intermediate (GLS, anova), complicated
(joint densities of eigenvalues), and beautiful (MLEs for decomposable models). Later
there were algorithms for cases where no
formula existed: necessary (nonlinear least
squares, generalized linear models, linear
programs), optional (robust estimators), and
elegant algorithms (IPS).
Simulation came later still. My early
view of it was not unlike my early view
of computing in statistics more generally:
that it was about formulae or algorithms
being quickly and (usually) accurately
implemented in a computer. If I wanted
to compare an actual significance level to
a nominal one, simulations could provide
answers more efficiently and less painfully
than slaving over a hot notebook. I knew
that if U is uniform, and F an arbitrary
c.d.f., then F -1(U) has c.d.f. F – that’s a
formula. I only found out recently that
Ulam suggested it in a 1947 letter to Von
Neumann, who confirmed that it worked in
a reply which included his rejection method
(that’s an algorithm) and some other ideas.
These were published together in 1951 with
several other gems of simulation in a brilliant two-and-a-half page note.
Things started to change for me around
1984, when I learned about the bootstrap
and the Gibbs sampler. Most importantly,
around then I learned—or tried—to view
computers as tools for solving problems
not solvable in any other way, not just as
machines for carrying out traditional calculations more quickly, more reliably, and
on a larger scale. With hindsight, isn’t that
exactly what Ulam and Von Neumann (who
gave us the Monte Carlo (MC) method
in 1947), and Metropolis, Rosenbluth,
Rosenbluth, Teller and Teller (who gave us
the Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC)
method in 1953), were doing: solving previously unsolvable problems using simulation?
The Bayesians got it right in the late
1980s in realizing that with MCMC they
could start to fulfill their dreams… but I
had no such dreams. As a result, I didn’t
pay close attention to developments in
stochastic simulation, and it has hurt me. In
1993 a student completed a thesis with me
on a problem for which sequential Monte
Carlo would have been a great help. I don’t
feel too bad about that, as the bootstrap
(particle) filter was only invented that year.
However, I should have been better prepared. But soon afterwards another student
could have benefitted from the same body
of work, and still I/we hadn’t caught up
with it. That was bad. Back in the early
1990s again, another student was studying
a problem in genetics involving point processes, one for which no formulae for key
quantities were available. I was unable to
help, but at least had the sense to send her
off to another place to pick up the necessary
skills. Again I should have been paying
closer attention to MC methods, but wasn’t.
These days she would probably use the
Approximate Bayesian Computation (ABC)
approach, which is uniquely applicable to
problems for which there is no closed form
expression for the likelihood function;
where you must simulate.
They say that necessity is the mother of
invention, and the world of simulation
is full of instances where that happened:
problems of neutron and photon transport,
computing equilibrium properties of solids,
liquids, gases and plasmas, image analysis,
the tracking and guidance of missiles, and
the estimation of times to most recent common ancestors in population genetics. All
of these problems led to a major advance in
stochastic simulation, and there are several
more like them.
It now seems to me that we are heading
into an era when all statistical analysis can
be done by simulation. We don’t need likelihood functions; we just need to know how
to simulate from the models we entertain
for our data. That’s been a sine qua non of
statistical analysis for some time now. We
don’t need models with sufficient statistics,
for which everything works out nicely; we
just need summary statistics, which provide
information about the parameters in our
model. We don’t need to be Bayesian; we
just need to be approximately so. We don’t
need theory to tell us our method works;
we just need to simulate and see.
However, we will need theory—lots
of it—to enable us do this, and do it efficiently. Obvious, or an impossible dream?
ENIAC, the first general purpose electronic computer,
launched modern simulation in the 1940s. Its programmers were all women: the first human computers
April/May . 2011
IMS Bulletin . 19
IMS Treasurer: Annual Report 2010
Introduction
This report details membership and
subscription data for calendar year end
2010. In addition, it reviews the fiscal year
2010 (FY2010: July 1, 2009 – June 30,
2010) financial statements. In 2010, the
total number of IMS members declined.
Subscriptions by institutions continued to
increase this past year. The financial status
of the Institute continues to be stable,
and actions have been taken to ensure its
long-term stability. Details of the events of
the past year, membership and subscription
data, sales data, and a detailed analysis of
the financial statement for FY2010 are
given below.
Co-Sponsored Print/Electronic Publications
* Electronic Communications in Probability
* Electronic Journal of Probability
* Electronic Journal of Statistics
* Journal of Computational and Graphical
Statistics
* NSF-CBMS Series in Probability and
Statistics
* Probability Surveys
* Statistics Surveys
Supported Publications
* Annales de l’Institut Henri Poincaré
* Bayesian Analysis
* Bernoulli
* Bernoulli News
* Brazilian Journal of Probability and
Statistics
Publications
http://imstat.org/publications/
In 2010, two new joint publications were
introduced. IMS Monographs and IMS
Textbooks are published jointly with the
Cambridge University Press. Each publication had its first volume appear during
2010. In turn, the former IMS publication, IMS Lecture Notes–Monograph Series
ceased publication in 2010. Any volumes
that would have previously gone into this
series will now either be included in IMS
Collections or in one of the two new series.
The following is a list of current IMS
core journals, as well as IMS co-sponsored,
affiliated and supported journals:
IMS Core Print/Electronic Publications
* Annals of Probability
* Annals of Applied Probability
* Annals of Statistics
* Annals of Applied Statistics
* Statistical Science
* Current Index to Statistics
* IMS Collections
* IMS Monographs
* IMS Textbooks
* IMS Bulletin
Affiliated Publications
* ALEA: Latin American Journal of
Probability and Mathematical Statistics
* Probability and Mathematical Statistics
Membership, Subscription and
Sales Data
Membership Data
Total individual paid membership in
the Institute as of December 31, 2010
decreased 3.17% from December 31, 2009.
Table 1 overleaf presents the membership
data back to 2002.
Geographic Distribution of Members
The IMS membership is currently distributed as follows:
* 62% United States
* 18% Europe
* 10% Asia
* 4% Canada
* 2% South America, Mexico and the
Caribbean
* 2% Australia and New Zealand
* 1% Africa
Selection of Journals by Members
Print subscriptions by members continued
to decrease in 2010, as expected, because
members are opting to reduce their use of
print while enjoying free electronic access to
all journals. Electronic access by individual
members has increased this year. Table
2 overleaf shows the current selection of
journals by members.
Revenue from all member dues and
journal subscriptions increased 6.2%, to
$339,690 for the fiscal year ending June 30,
2010, up from $319,953 in FY2009. This
is attributed to increased dues and subscription rates for 2010.
The IMS also offers joint membership
opportunities with the following societies:
* Bernoulli Society (BS)
* International Statistical Institute/
Bernoulli Society (ISI/BS)
* International Society for Bayesian
Analysis (ISBA)
* Applied Probability Society/INFORMS
(APS/INFORMS)
* Sociedad Latino Americana de
Probabilidad y Estadistica Matematica
(SLAPEM).
In 2010, we processed 619 memberships to
other societies (up from 599 in 2009).
IMS China
In 2008, the IMS introduced IMS China.
IMS China promotes the participation of
Chinese scholars in activities of the Institute
of Mathematical Statistics. It provides members in China with an easier method for
membership payment and allows the IMS
an opportunity to introduce our organization to a constituency that may not have
had easy access to our offerings in the past.
IMS China members residing in mainland
China received free membership in 2008
and 2009. In 2010 there was a drop in this
membership as plans for member renewals
were ironed out. We expect this category
20 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
to improve in 2011 as these issues are
addressed.
TABLE 1: Membership, by Calendar Year
Institutional Subscription Data
Table 3 presents comparative subscription
data for institutions to each of our scientific
journals for 2010 and previous years. All
journals experienced subscription increases
in 2010. Two publications, the IMS
Bulletin and the Current Index to Statistics,
experienced decreases. Revenue from all
non-member subscriptions was $1,481,816
for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2010,
up from $1,284,708 for the FY2009. The
increase is due to increased subscription
fees and increased subscription rates.
Approximately 60% of the non-member
subscribers to IMS journals are in USA and
Canada, with the remaining subscribers
distributed throughout the world.
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Members
2940 2981 3044 3074 3092 3152
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
IMS China
Student
496 707 971 1224 1295 1160
Total Individual 3436 3688 4015 4298 4387 4312
Organizational
98 102 107 100 111
45*
2008
3156
180
1328
4664
20
2009
3091
173
1368
4632
11
2010 % change
2993 -10.3%
2 -98.8%
1160 -15.2%
4155
-3.2%
12
9.1%
* Organizational Membership was reconstructed in 2007 and libraries were no longer included. This change reclassified these previous organizational
members to institutional subscribers. This was merely a reclassification and not a loss.
TABLE 2: Member** Subscriptions, by Calendar Year
PRINT (paid) 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 % change
AAP
669 640 586 670 619 497 428 382 280 -26.7%
AOP
722 706 693 677 616 534 481 416 298 -28.4%
AOAS
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a 1,160 1,089 714
-34.4%
AOS
1,753 1,713 1,773 1,853 1,723 1,608 1,323 1,109 763 -31.2%
STS
2,582 2,642 2,536 2,565 2,412 2,146 1,880 1,680 1,310 -22.0%
Total
5,726 5,701 5,588 5,765 5,370 4,785 5,272 4,676 3,365 -28.0%
ELECTRONIC (free access): members setting up individual electronic access to IMS journals
Total
482 943 1,112 1,262 1,409 1,660 1,681 1,711 1,761
2.9%
** Previously this information was reported as all members (including organizational), however data has been reformatted to show individual
members only, to reflect the change in classification and to better view the current status of the data.
TABLE 3: Institutional Paid Subscriptions, by Calendar Year
Book Sales Data
Table 4 presents sales data for sales of the
five past and current IMS book series. In
2010, two new series were started, IMS
Textbooks and IMS Monographs, jointly with
the Cambridge University Press. Each series
published one volume in the second half of
2010. The IMS Lecture Notes–Monograph
Series ceased publication in 2010. Total
revenue for all books decreased slightly
to $17,148 in FY2010 from $18,984 in
FY2009.
PRINT
AAP
AOP
AOAS
AOS
STS
Bulletin
CIS
AIHP s
Bernoulli s
BJPS s
Total
s
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 % change
690 716 675 659 659 700 636 680 684
0.6%
1,001 1,034 1,001 974 911 977 900 948 967
2.0%
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a 174 247 320
29.6%
1,320 1,342 1,268 1,233 1,171 1,227 1,118 1,154 1,158
0.3%
1,041 1,064 976 949 922 976 865 890 899
1.0%
267 229 222 207 201 275 174 176 166
-5.7%
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a 295 297 267
-10.1%
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a [174] 217 289 312
8.0%
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a [199] 199 198 264 278
8.0%
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
64
78
21.9%
4,319 4,385 4,142 4,022 3,864 4,528 4,577 5,009 5,129
2.4%
denotes IMS-supported journals. Numbers in [brackets] are prior to journal becoming IMS-supported.
TABLE 4: Total sales from the NSF-CBMS Regional Conference Series, the Lecture Notes – Monograph Series, and IMS Collections, Monographs and Textbooks [Fiscal Year Data (July 1-June 30)]
Total NSF-CBMS sales (8 vols)
Total LNMS sales (58 vols)
Total IMS Collections sales (7 vols)
IMS Monographs sales (1 vol)
IMS Textbooks sales (1 vol)
to 2002
4,436
22,643
2003
307
910
2004
394
887
2005
328
603
2006
258
1,084
2007
129
628
2008
108
454
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
2009
57
235
9
n/a
n/a
2010
108
297
3
660
639
TOTAL
6,017
27,741
12
660
639
April/May . 2011
FINANCIAL OVERVIEW
The following is a detailed analysis of the
Financial Statement for FY2010, which
is presented in this issue of the IMS
Bulletin, following this Treasurer’s Report.
Comparisons are always with FY2009.
The overall financial status of the
Institute continues to be stable.
Per the auditor’s report, in FY2010 we
experienced an increase in unrestricted net
assets of $298,089. This increase is due in
part to unrealized gains on our long term
investments which totaled $110,293. These
gains are a reflection of the improvements
in the financial markets over the last year.
We do not expect to have to pull funds out
of these long term reserves into our operational accounts in the near future.
The IMS Council approved a FY2010
operational budget that included net
operational losses of $10,758. Due to tight
fiscal controls and better than expected
revenues, the actual net revenue is $188,461
from operations in FY2010. In FY2009
the gain on operations was $61,409. Please
see Figures 1 and 2, right, which show the
history of our net assets and net operating revenue. The Council and Executive
Committee made it a high priority to have
an operational balanced budget in FY2010
and beyond and to increase net assets back
to the levels appropriate for our revenue
and expense stream.
Revenue
* Membership dues and subscription
revenues were adjusted, as in the past
to prorate calendar-year revenues to fit
with the Institute’s fiscal year reporting. Revenues from membership dues
and subscriptions are up in FY2010 as
compared to FY2009 due to increased
dues and subscription fees. Print journal
prices for members are set at our variable cost to print.
* Revenues from institutional subscribers
IMS Bulletin . 21
22 . IMS Bulletin
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
are up due to increases in subscription
fees and increases in the total number of
institutional subscribers.
Sales of back issues are up in FY2010
from FY2009. However, we should bear
in mind that, as a trend, print orders are
decreasing as electronic access increases.
Page charges are down significantly in
FY2010. Due to its voluntary nature,
page charge contributions tend to fluctuate greatly from year to year.
Revenue from sales of books are down
slightly as lower cost volumes were sold
in FY2010.
Meeting income is down in FY2010
because IMS did not manage any meetings in FY2010. The income shown
is a result of our contractual arranged
income from the Joint Statistical
Meetings and a small amount of income
from the WNAR/IMS Meeting.
Advertising revenues are down due to
fewer ads placed.
Offprints, royalty and other showed an
increase, as royalties from IMS’s interest
in JSTOR increased due to our placing
of IMS Lecture Notes–Monograph Series
on JSTOR.
Net profits of joint publication ventures
is for the Journal of Computational and
Graphical Statistics relationship. It is up
in FY 2010, due to decreased expenses
of that journal.
Investment income is down in FY2010.
This is interest on CDs which was down
over the past year.
The unrealized gains on investments
shows the increased value we experienced on our mutual funds due to the
increase in the markets.
Expenses
The IMS makes a distinction between
Program and General Administrative
expenses in its audited reports. This is
appropriate reporting for a non-profit
Volume 40 . Issue 3
organization and gives members a better
idea of how much is being spent on actual
programming (journals, meetings, etc)
versus what is spent purely on administration of the Institute. We are happy to report
that 94.5% (vs. 94.4% last year) of your
dues dollars goes directly into the program
functions of the IMS. More on expenses
can be found in the “Discussion of Note
H” section below.
wage increases.
* The management fee shows the expenses
*
*
Changes in temporarily restricted assets
The contributions listed in FY2009 and
FY2010 represent donations made to
the Open Access, Le Cam and Tweedie
Funds. The investment income under
“Contributions” is that amount allocated
to specific funds and not the general fund.
Funds released were from the Tweedie
Memorial Fund.
*
*
Discussion of Note F in Financial Statements
for FY2010
Note F has been added to the Financial
Statements this year to clarify the
breakdown of “Unearned memberships,
subscriptions and meeting revenue.” The
amounts listed for “Regular members and
Non-members” is then earned during the
first half of FY2011 (second half of calendar
year 2010). The lifetime membership is
then earned over a 12-year period for each
life member.
Discussion of Note H in Financial Statements
for FY2010
Here you will see the allocation for expenses
for Program and General Administration.
Production and Editorial expenses will be
discussed below in the “Discussion of Note
I.”
* Mailing and shipping at the press is
down from FY2009 due to decreases in
total issues mailed as members opt to
use electronic version of journals.
* Salaries are up in FY2010 reflecting
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
paid to FASEB for the dues, subscriptions and web services they provide for
IMS. This is down in FY2010 as more
services have been automated, decreasing costs.
Scientific meeting expenses are down in
FY2010 because the IMS did not manage a meeting.
The supported journal royalty is the
contractual amount paid to supported
journals for our agreement to assist
them with publishing. The royalty is a
percentage of net income.
Postage and shipping from the office
includes mailing of all dues and
subscription paper renewal forms and
catalogs. It also includes shipment of all
IMS book orders.
Insurance fees are stable. This includes
liability insurance for all officers and
editors, publications and business equipment.
Credit card fees include all processing
fees for credit cards. This has increased
as more members opt to pay their membership online.
Professional fees includes fees paid to
accountants and lawyers.
Business meeting expenses are up
since the business meetings in FY2010
required further travel by executive
committee members.
Membership drives and publicity
includes advertising of journals and IMS
membership.
Information technology services represent the hiring of contractors to provide
needed services. This is up in FY2010
due to increased needs, particularly in
order to meet regulations regarding
online transactions.
Storage fees are up as we are now storing
more titles.
Contributions to other organizations
April/May . 2011
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
includes all dues and subscriptions to
several organizations by the IMS and
the Executive Director. These include
Conference Board of Mathematical
Statistics, Association for Women in
Math, the Council for Engineering and
Scientific Society Executive, the Society
for Scholarly Publishing, Association for
Learned and Society Publishers and the
American Mathematical Society annual
salary survey.
Rent and utilities is for the Executive
Director’s office.
Administrative Services includes assistance with data entry for the Executive
Director.
Printing includes all non-journal printing, including annual invoices and
catalogs.
Computer equipment and software
includes equipment for the Executive
Director, the Production Manager and
the Bulletin Assistant Editor.
Supplies include all needed office supplies for Executive Director’s office.
Office and other expenses includes bank
fees and other miscellaneous expenses.
Telephone is for both the Executive
Director’s phone and an allocation
of calls to FASEB on IMS dues and
subscription inquiries.
Discussion of Note I in Financial Statement
for FY2010
Production Expenses:
* Production expenses for Annals of
Applied Statistics, Annals of Probability
and Annals of Statistics are up, as the
total page count for all these journals
was up in FY2010.
* Statistical Science and the Annals of
Applied Probability production expenses
are down as pages decreased.
* The IMS Bulletin expenses are down due
to printing fewer pages, because of the
use of new web-based job boards.
IMS Bulletin . 23
* NSF-CBMS Series reprinted one volume
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
in FY2010.
IMS Collections printed three issues in
FY2010 and only one issue in FY2009.
LNMS printed one volume in FY2010
and only reprinted one issue in FY2009.
The web page production expenses were
stable in FY2010.
AIHP published 5 issues in FY2009 and
4 issues in FY2010.
Bernoulli printed extra pages in FY2010
and Bernoulli News moved to a new
format in FY2010. These additional
expenses are covered entirely by the
Bernoulli Society.
Brazilian Journal of Probability and
Statistics was a new supported journal
in FY2009. It published one issue in
FY2009. In FY2010 it published three
issues.
Expenses for Probability Surveys,
Statistics Surveys and Electronic Journal
of Statistics are minimal and shared with
the other co-sponsoring societies.
Current Index to Statistics had hosting
expenses in FY2010. These are expected
to be ongoing.
Electronic operations include expenses
for placement and hosting of our journals on Project Euclid and ArXiv, and
expenses associated with our Electronic
Journal Management System. We experienced decreased rates in FY2010 as all
back issues are now in Project Euclid
and IMS is no longer posting articles for
the open access journals to ArXiv.
Editorial Expenses:
* Editorial expenses for all journals are
minimal in FY2010 as all journals have
moved into the central editorial office.
All editors are within their budgets for
the length of their term.
* Current Index to Statistics expenses are
stable.
* The IMS Bulletin assistant editor
expenses decreased due to changes in
the exchange rate as she is located in the
UK.
* The web editor expenses are down. In
FY2009 work on a new content management system for the web page was in
place. The final phase of this project was
completed in FY2011.
* Managing and production editorial
expenses are up slightly.
* The Central Editorial Office handles
all secretarial support for the IMS core,
supported and electronic based journals.
Discussion of Note J in Financial Statement
for FY2010
Note J shows distribution of funds in
restricted accounts.
* Dorweiller, Hotelling and Development
Funds experienced no changes.
* The Reserve Life Fund increased as
more members opted to become Life
members.
* The New Researchers Meeting Fund
increased as funds left over from previous meetings were added to the fund in
FY2010.
* The Laha Fund decreased as grants were
awarded in FY2010.
* The Tweedie and Open Access Funds
increased due to donations.
* The Le Cam Fund increased due to
return on investment for the endowment.
Recommendation
The Executive Committee recommended
an institutional subscription fee increase of
approximately 9% for 2011. Dues rates for
members are increased by US$5 to US$103.
Subscription rates to members are adjusted
to the variable cost. Members are given a
10% discount off dues if they renewed by
December 31. The 2010–2011 Council
approved these recommendations in June
and August 2010.
Jean Opsomer, Treasurer
1
INSTITUTE OF MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS
INSTITUTE OF MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS
2
STATEMENTS OF FINANCIAL POSITION
STATEMENTS OF ACTIVITIES
June 30, 2010 and 2009
For the Years Ended June 30, 2010 and 2009
2010
ASSETS
Cash
Investments, at fair market value
Accounts receivable
Interest receivable
Prepaid expenses
Investment in joint venture
Deposits
Restricted cash for endowment
Total assets
$
516,498
2,319,872
8,956
1,761
37,696
49,962
11,000
37,614
$ 2,983,359
2010
2009
$
316,755
2,059,681
16,442
9,484
68,548
45,983
3,300
37,743
$ 2,557,936
Changes in unrestricted net assets:
Revenue and support:
Membership dues and journal subscriptions
Non-member subscriptions
Sales of back issues
Page charges
Sales of books
Scientific meetings
Advertising
Offprints, royalties and other
Net profit of joint venture publications
Unrealized gain (loss) on investments
Investment income
Total unrestricted revenue and support
LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS
Liabilities:
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities
Unearned memberships, subscription and
meeting revenue
131,869
$
51,793
1,115,979
Total liabilities
1,291,791
1,167,772
Net assets:
Unrestricted:
Undesignated
Board-designated
1,549,582
85,503
1,245,442
91,554
1,635,085
1,336,996
Temporarily restricted
24,063
20,983
Permanently restricted
32,420
32,185
1,691,568
1,390,164
$ 2,983,359
$ 2,557,936
Total net assets
Total liabilities and net assets
3
Total unrestricted revenue, support and other
Expenses:
Program
General and administrative
Total expenses
See accompanying notes and auditors’ report.
INSTITUTE OF MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS
-2STATEMENTS OF ACTIVITIES (Continued)
Increase (decrease) in unrestricted net assets
Increase (decrease) in net assets
Net assets, beginning of year
Net assets, end of year
319,953
1,284,708
4,165
53,251
18,984
31,718
31,001
105,280
2,015
(193,302)
62,819
1,720,592
1,282
776
2,185,766
1,721,368
1,783,123
104,554
1,749,494
103,767
1,887,677
1,853,261
298,089
Increase in temporarily restricted net assets
(131,893)
3,751
611
(1,282)
2,038
611
(776)
3,080
1,873
See accompanying notes and auditors’ report.
INSTITUTE OF MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS
-3STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
4
For the Years Ended June 30, 2010 and 2009
2010
Increase in permanently restricted net assets
$
2,184,484
Changes in temporarily restricted net assets:
Contributions
Investment income
Net assets released from restrictions
For the Years Ended June 30, 2010 and 2009
Changes in permanently restricted net assets:
Contributions
339,690
1,481,816
10,456
24,408
17,148
15,915
29,383
116,648
3,979
110,239
34,802
Net assets released from restrictions
$
1,159,922
Total unrestricted
$
2009
2009
2010
235
407
235
407
301,404
(129,613)
1,390,164
1,519,777
$ 1,691,568
$ 1,390,164
Cash flows from operating activities:
Changes in net assets
$
Adjustments to reconcile changes in
net assets to net cash provided by
operating activities:
Net profit in investments in joint ventures
Realized and unrealized (gains) losses on investments
(Increase) decrease in assets:
Accounts receivable
Interest receivable
Prepaid expenses
Deposits
Restricted cash for endowment
Increase (decrease) in liabilities:
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities
Unearned memberships, subscription
and meeting revenue
301,404
2009
$
(129,613)
(3,979)
(110,239)
(2,015)
193,302
7,486
7,723
30,852
(7,700)
129
14,067
247
(9,648)
(3,300)
(404)
80,076
(48,629)
43,943
121,583
48,291
265,203
349,695
135,590
(149,952)
(201,140)
(149,952)
(201,140)
Net increase (decrease) in cash
199,743
(65,550)
Cash, beginning of year
316,755
382,305
Total adjustments
Net cash provided by operating activities
Cash flows from investing activities:
Net change in investments
Net cash used by investing activities
Cash, end of year
$
516,498
$
316,755
5
INSTITUTE OF MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
INSTITUTE OF MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS
6
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)
June 30, 2010 and 2009
NOTE A -- Description of organization
The Institute of Mathematical Statistics (the Institute) is an international professional and
scholarly society devoted to the development and dissemination of the theory and applications of
statistics and probability. Its activities include sponsorship of journals and other scientific
publications, organization of scientific meetings and cooperation with other scientific
organizations.
The scientific journals are The Annals of Applied Probability, The Annals of Applied Statistics,
The Annals of Probability, The Annals of Statistics and Statistical Science. The IMS Bulletin is
the news organ of the Institute. In addition, the Institute publishes The IMS Lecture Notes Monograph Series and IMS Collections. Jointly with other organizations, the Institute publishes
the Electronic Journal of Probability, Electronic Communications in Probability, Electronic
Journal of Statistics, IMS Monographs, IMS Textbooks, Journal of Computational and Graphical
Statistics, Probability Surveys, Statistics Surveys, Current Index to Statistics and NSF-CBMS
Regional Conference Series in Probability and Statistics. On behalf of other organizations, the
Institute produces Bayesian Analysis, Bernoulli, Bernoulli News, Brazilian Journal of
Probability and Statistics and Annales de l’Institut Henri Poincaré (B) Probabilités et
Statistiques.
The Institute is an international organization of approximately 4,500 statisticians, probabilists,
epidemiologists and econometricians from industry, academia and government.
NOTE B -- Summary of significant accounting policies
Basis of accounting
The Institute maintains its accounting records and prepares its financial statements on the accrual
basis.
Fair value of financial instruments
The carrying amount of cash, accounts receivable, interest receivable, deposits and accounts
payable are stated at a fair value or approximate fair value.
Financial statement presentation
The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally
accepted in the United States of America for not-for-profit organizations. The financial activities
are classified into three classes of net assets: unrestricted, temporarily restricted and permanently
restricted net assets.
7
See auditors’ report.
INSTITUTE OF MATHEMATICAL
STATISTICS
-6-
June 30, 2010 and 2009
NOTE B -- Summary of significant accounting policies (continued)
Financial statement presentation (continued)
Unrestricted net assets: These amounts consist of net assets that are not subject to donorimposed restrictions. Unrestricted net assets are expendable resources used to support the
Institute’s core activities. These net assets may be designated for specific purposes by action of
the Council to be used for future periods.
Temporarily restricted: Those net assets and activities which are donor restricted for: (a)
support of specific operating activities; (b) investment for a specified term; (c) use in a specified
future period; or (d) acquisition of long-lived assets.
Permanently restricted: Those net assets and activities which are permanently donor
restricted for holdings of: (a) assets donated with stipulations that they be preserved and not
be sold; or (b) assets donated with stipulations that they be invested to provide a permanent
source of income. Permanently restricted net assets consist of cash gifts restricted by donors
to establish a fund honoring the memory of Professor Le Cam.
Revenue and support recognition
Membership dues and subscription fees are recognized as revenue on a straight-line basis over
the term of the applicable membership and subscription period. Membership and subscription
periods run from January 1 to December 31. Any time a member or non-member subscribes,
he/she is entitled to all issues of the journal(s) published during the subscription period. The
unearned portion of the revenue is recorded as a liability under the unearned memberships,
subscription and meeting revenue in the Statements of Financial Position.
The Institute recognizes contributions upon the earlier of receipt or when a pledge is executed.
Contributions without donor-imposed restrictions are reported as unrestricted support.
Contributions with donor-imposed restrictions are reported as either temporarily restricted or
permanently restricted support, depending upon the type of restriction.
Income taxes
The Institute is a Section 501(c)(3) organization exempt from income taxes under Section 501(a)
of the Internal Revenue Code and Section 23701d of the California Revenue and Taxation Code.
Therefore, no provision for federal and California income tax is reflected in the financial
statements.
See auditors’ report.
INSTITUTE OF MATHEMATICAL
STATISTICS
-7-
8
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)
June 30, 2010 and 2009
June 30, 2010 and 2009
NOTE B -- Summary of significant accounting policies (continued)
NOTE B -- Summary of significant accounting policies (continued)
Income taxes (continued)
Functional allocation of expenses
As required by the Income Taxes Topic of the Financial Accounting Standards Board
Accounting Standards Codification, the Institute recognizes the effect of income tax positions
only if those positions are more likely than not of being sustained. The Institute does not believe
its financial statements include any uncertain tax positions.
The costs of providing the program and supporting activities of the Institute are summarized
in the Statements of Activities and are shown in detail in Note H. Expenses that can be
directly identified with a specific function are allocated directly to that function. Expenses
that cannot be directly identified with a specific function are allocated between the program
services and the general and administrative based on allocation methods and estimates made
by management.
Use of estimates
The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported
amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of
the financial statements and reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting
period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
Reclassifications
Certain reclassifications have been made to the financial statements for the year ended
June 30, 2009 to conform to the year ended June 30, 2010 financial statements presentation.
Such reclassifications have no effect on net assets as previously reported.
Investments in joint ventures
Investments in joint ventures are stated at cost plus the equity in the undistributed earnings of the
joint ventures since the dates of acquisition.
Production costs of publications
The Institute’s policy is to expense the production costs of its publications as incurred rather than
capitalize these costs as inventory. The Institute follows this policy as there is no discernible
market for the publications after the initial distribution.
Shipping and handling costs
Shipping and handling costs are recorded as incurred. These expenses are included in the
functional expenses in Note H.
NOTE C -- Concentration of credit risk
The Institute maintains cash balances at three financial institutions. The balances at times may
exceed federally insured limits. The Institute has not experienced any losses in these accounts
and management believes they are not exposed to any significant credit risk.
NOTE D -- Valuation of investments
In August 2006, the Institute adopted a new investment policy whereby the Institute is
committed to a policy of low-cost long-term indexed investing with minimal intervention.
The Institute’s investment funds (that is, the funds other than the operating funds or the
operating reserve) are to be invested as follows:
•
•
60% in domestic and international equities
40% in fixed-income instruments
The distribution of funds is reviewed annually and is rebalanced if the actual allocations differ
from the targets given here by more than 5%.
The Institute maintains accounts with Merrill Lynch and Vanguard Group for operating,
operating reserve and reserve funds. Investments include mutual funds carried at their fair
market value and certificates of deposit at various institutions maturing at various dates. The
certificates of deposit are immediately convertible to cash with maturities ranging from one
month to less than two years.
9
INSTITUTE OF MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS
10
INSTITUTE OF MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)
June 30, 2010 and 2009
June 30, 2010 and 2009
NOTE D -- Valuation of investments (continued)
NOTE E -- Investment in joint venture (continued)
Accounting standards define fair value, establish a framework for measuring fair value, and
expand disclosures about fair value measurements. The standards prioritized, within the
measurement of fair value, the use of market-based information over entity-specific
information and established a three-level hierarchy for fair value measurements based on the
transparency of information, such as the pricing source, used in the valuation of an asset or
liability as of the measurement date.
The following is a summary of the financial position and results of operations of the joint venture
for the years ended June 30:
Journal of Computational
and Graphical Statistics
2010
Level I - Quoted prices are available in active markets for identical investments as of the
reporting date. The type of investments in Level I include listed equities held in
the name of the Institute, and exclude listed equities and other securities held
indirectly through commingled funds.
Current assets
Level II - Pricing inputs, including broker quotes, are generally those other than exchange
quoted prices in active markets, which are either directly or indirectly observable
as of the reporting date, and fair value is determined through the use of models or
other valuation methodologies.
2009
$
204,922
$
200,145
Total assets
$
204,922
$
200,145
Current liabilities
$
80,017
$
Undistributed co-sponsors’ equity
85,187
114,958
124,905
Total liabilities and cosponsors’ equity
$
204,922
$
200,145
Revenue
$
123,356
$
122,386
Net income
$
9,947
$
5,037
Level III - Pricing inputs are unobservable for the investment and includes situations where
there is little, if any, market activity for the investment. The inputs into the
determination of fair value require significant management judgment or
estimation. Investments that are included in this category generally include
privately held investments and partnership interests.
NOTE F -- Unearned memberships, subscription and meeting revenue
All of the Institute’s investments are considered Level I. Ending investments value was
$2,319,872 and $2,059,681 as of June 30, 2010 and 2009, respectively.
Unearned memberships, subscription and meeting revenue consists of the following for the years
ended June 30:
2010
NOTE E -- Investment in joint venture
The Institute, American Statistical Association (ASA) and Interface Foundation of North
America (IFNA) participate in a joint venture for periodic publication of the Journal of
Computational and Graphical Statistics. The Institute’s participation in profits and ownership of
this venture is 40%.
Regular members subscription dues
Non-members subscription dues
Lifetime and retired membership dues
Other deferred revenue
Total unearned memberships, subscription and
meeting revenue
The Institute’s equity was $49,962 and $45,983 for Journal of Computational and Graphical
Statistics (the IFNA venture) at June 30, 2010 and 2009, respectively.
11
INSTITUTE OFSee
MATHEMATICAL
auditors’ report. STATISTICS
12
- 10 NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)
June 30, 2010 and 2009
$
136,664
713,587
305,597
4,074
$ 1,159,922
2009
$
124,825
683,071
304,314
3,769
$ 1,115,979
INSTITUTE OFSee
MATHEMATICAL
auditors’ report. STATISTICS
- 11 NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)
June 30, 2010 and 2009
NOTE G -- Retirement plan
NOTE H -- Functional expenses (continued)
The Institute participates in an employer matching 403(b) retirement annuity plan. The Institute
matches 200% of the contributions of eligible employees up to 10% of the employee’s gross
salary. Employees who have completed three years of service are eligible to participate. The
Institute contributed $10,267 and $9,883 for the years ended June 30, 2010 and 2009,
respectively.
Program and general and administrative expenses for the year ended June 30, 2009 were as
follows:
NOTE H -- Functional expenses
Program and general and administrative expenses for the year ended June 30, 2010 were as
follows:
Program
Production expenses (see Note I)
Editorial expenses (see Note I)
Mailing and shipping at press
Salaries, payroll taxes and employee benefits
Management fee
Scientific meetings
Supported journal royalty
Postage and shipping from office
Insurance
Credit card fees and refunds
Professional fees
Business meetings
Membership drives and publicity
Information technology service
Storage
Contributions to other organizations
Rent and utilities
Administrative services
Printing
Computer equipment and software
Supplies
Office expense and other
Telephone
$
General and
Administrative
983,795 $
248,753
162,503
66,253
120,835
55,673
29,827
16,662
14,135
18,556
14,898
13,085
10,642
9,932
9,443
1,650
2,443
1,345
861
1,173
659
$ 1,783,123
$
- $
66,253
7,141
6,058
18,000
1,650
3,230
576
861
502
283
Total
983,795
248,753
162,503
132,506
120,835
55,673
29,827
23,803
20,193
18,556
18,000
14,898
13,085
10,642
9,932
9,443
3,300
3,230
2,443
1,921
1,722
1,675
942
104,554 $ 1,887,677
Program
Production expenses (see Note I)
Editorial expenses (see Note I)
Mailing and shipping at press
Management fee
Salaries, payroll taxes and employee benefits
Scientific meetings
Postage and shipping from office
Insurance
Professional fees
Credit card fees and refunds
Membership drives and publicity
Contributions to other organizations
Business meetings
Supported journal royalty
Storage
Bad debts
Information technology service
Computer equipment and software
Printing
Administrative services
Presidential Fund
Rent and utilities
Office expense and other
Supplies
Telephone
$
General and
Administrative
892,400 $
287,921
167,824
139,382
63,604
68,059
16,143
14,622
17,589
14,443
9,629
9,120
8,645
8,492
8,255
6,370
3,774
5,165
3,794
1,650
1,312
644
657
$ 1,749,494
$
- $
63,604
6,919
6,266
18,000
1,617
4,224
1,650
562
644
281
Total
892,400
287,921
167,824
139,382
127,208
68,059
23,062
20,888
18,000
17,589
14,443
9,629
9,120
8,645
8,492
8,255
6,370
5,391
5,165
4,224
3,794
3,300
1,874
1,288
938
103,767 $ 1,853,261
13
INSTITUTE OF MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS
14
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)
INSTITUTE OF MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)
June 30, 2010 and 2009
June 30, 2010 and 2009
NOTE I -- Production and editorial expenses (continued)
NOTE I -- Production and editorial expenses
Production and editorial expenses incurred were as follows:
2010
2010
Production expenses:
Core publications:
The Annals of Applied Probability
The Annals of Applied Statistics
The Annals of Probability
The Annals of Statistics
Statistical Science
IMS Bulletin
NSF - CBMS Series
IMS Collections
The IMS Lecture Notes - Monograph Series
Web page
$
Total core publications
$
755,059
Supported publications:
Annales de l’Institut Henri Poincaré
Bernoulli
Bernoulli News
Brazilian Journal of Probability and Statistics
Total supported publications
Co-sponsored publications:
Probability Surveys
Statistics Surveys
Current Index to Statistics
Electronic Journal of Statistics
Total co-sponsored publications
General publication expenses:
Electronic operations for all publications
Total general publication expenses
Total production expenses
15
104,000
144,072
121,561
247,839
56,476
44,451
507
8,569
14,253
13,331
2009
55,576
64,152
3,420
19,598
63,699
58,701
2,598
5,992
142,746
130,990
1,550
1,680
6,404
5,150
1,419
684
1,627
14,784
3,730
71,206
93,871
983,795
Total temporarily restricted
Total net assets
The following are net assets available at June 30:
Unrestricted:
Undesignated
14,524
3,144
6,395
12,884
2,134
5,965
24,063
20,983
32,420
32,185
$ 1,691,568
$ 1,390,164
NOTE K -- Subsequent events
The date to which events occurring after June 30, 2010 have been evaluated for possible
adjustments to the financial statements or disclosure is December 20, 2010, which is the date on
which the financial statements were available to be issued.
2,000
1,000
30,000
64,936
41,009
91,808
18,000
$
248,753
$
1,000
30,000
72,206
76,010
90,455
18,250
287,921
2010
2009
$ 1,549,582
$ 1,245,442
Board-designated:
Dorweiller Fund
Hotelling Fund
New Researchers Meeting Fund
Development Fund
Laha Fund
3,600
1,600
31,594
25,000
23,709
3,600
1,600
31,219
25,000
30,135
Total Board-designated
85,503
91,554
- 15 -
2009
2009
NOTE J -- Net assets
See auditors’ report.
NOTE J -- Net assets (continued)
Permanently restricted:
Le Cam Endowment
$
892,400
June 30, 2010 and 2009
2010
Total editorial expenses
93,871
$
See auditors’ report.
INSTITUTE OF MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS
- 14 NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)
Temporarily restricted:
Tweedie Memorial Fund
Open Access Fund
Le Cam Earnings Fund
$
663,809
71,206
$
122,827
110,335
115,704
187,997
59,970
46,132
5,171
2,910
12,763
Editorial expenses:
The Annals of Applied Probability
The Annals of Statistics
The Annals of Probability
Current Index to Statistics
IMS Bulletin
WWW editor
Managing and production editors
Central editorial office
28 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
IMS meetings around the world
IMS co-sponsored meeting
Statistical Challenges in Modern Astronomy V
June 13–17, 2011
Center for Astrostatistics, Penn State University
w http://astrostatistics.psu.edu/su11scma5/
The Statistical Challenges in Modern Astronomy (SCMA) conferences, held every five years since 1991, are the
premiere forum for research statisticians and astronomers to discuss methodological issues of mutual interest.
Astronomers face an incredible range of problems in statistical inference, including mega-datasets, modeling data
with nonlinear astrophysical models, time series analysis from irregularly spaced observations, spatial analysis of
clustering processes, treatment of censoring and truncation, heteroscedastic measurement errors, and more. The
issues arise in all fields of astronomy—planetary, stellar, extragalactic and cosmological—and with observations at
all wavebands of light. Major investments in new telescopes require advanced statistical methodologies to attain
their scientific goals. Statistics serves many research communities and is constantly enriching its methodology and
capabilities. Astrostatistics today is a vibrant and growing cross-disciplinary enterprise.
SCMA V is preceded by weekend Tutorials on advanced topics, and the 7th annual Summer School on
Statistics for Astronomers. The latter provides an intensive introduction to statistical inference and the R programming environment.
The SCMA V Scientific Program is divided into nine sessions with approximately 30 confirmed invited speakers: Statistical Modeling in Astronomy; Bayesian Analysis Across Astronomy; Bayesian Cosmology; Data Mining
and Informatics; Sparsity; Interpreting Astrophysical Simulations; Time Domain Astronomy; Spatial and Image
Analysis; and Future Directions for Astrostatistics.
The conference welcomes contributed papers from statisticians and astronomers. Registration Deadline: May
6, 2011. Registration may close earlier for the summer school if the enrollment limit is reached. To register visit
http://astrostatistics.psu.edu/su11scma5/reg.html
Contacts: Eric Feigelson, Dept. of Astronomy& Astrophysics, Penn State University e edf@astro.psu.edu ; and
G. Jogesh Babu, Dept. of Statistics, Penn State University e babu@psu.edu
IMS co-sponsored meeting
NEW
IMS co-sponsored meeting
36th Conference on Stochastic Processes
and their Applications
July 29 – August 2, 2013
University of Colorado, Boulder., USA
Conference on Modeling High Frequency Data in Finance 3
July 27–31, 2011
Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, New Jersey
w TBC
w http://kolmogorov.math.stevens.edu/conference2011/
IMS Reps: Ionut Florescu, Jose Figueroa Lopez
NEW
At a glance:
forthcoming
IMS Annual
Meeting and
JSM dates
2011
IMS Annual Meeting @
JSM: Miami Beach,
FL, July 30–
August 4, 2011
2012
IMS Annual Meeting
@ World Congress:
İstanbul, Turkey,
July 9–14, 2012
JSM: San Diego,
CA, July 28–
August 2, 2012
2013
IMS Annual Meeting
@ JSM: Montréal,
Canada, August
3–8, 2013
2014
IMS Annual Meeting:
Sydney, Australia,
July 7–11, 2014
IMS co-sponsored meeting
Colloquium in honor of Hans Rudolf Künsch on the occasion of his 60th birthday
October 3–4, 2011, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
NEW
JSM: Boston, MA,
IMS Reps: Peter Bühlmann, Marloes Maathuis, Sara van de Geer
August 2–7, 2014
w https://stat.ethz.ch/events/Colloquium_Kuensch
Keynote speakers are Jim Berger (Duke University), Stuart Geman (Brown University),
Peter Green (University of Bristol). Invited speakers are: Rainer Dahlhaus (University of
Heidelberg), Arnoldo Frigessi (University of Oslo), Reinhard Furrer (University of Zurich),
Havard Rue (Norwegian Univ. S&T Trondheim), Reto Knutti (ETH Zurich), Christian P.
Robert (Université Paris-Dauphine).
2015
Hans R. Künsch
IMS Annual Meeting
@ JSM: Seattle, WA,
August 8–13, 2015
April/May . 2011
IMS Bulletin . 29
IMS sponsored meeting
IMS sponsored meeting
IMS sponsored meeting
IMS Annual Meeting @
2011 Joint Statistical Meetings
July 30 – August 4, 2011, Miami Beach, FL
IMS Annual Meeting @
2013 Joint Statistical Meetings
August 3–8, 2013, Montréal, Quebec, Canada
2014 IMS Annual Meeting
July 7–11, 2014
Sydney, Australia
w http://amstat.org/meetings/jsm/2011/
w http://amstat.org/meetings/jsm.cfm
w TBC
Miami beach
IMS sponsored meeting
2014 Joint Statistical Meetings
August 2–7, 2014
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
w http://amstat.org/meetings/jsm.cfm
IMS sponsored meeting
IMS sponsored meeting
2012 ENAR/IMS Spring Meeting
April 1–4, 2012
Washington DC, USA
2012 Joint Statistical Meetings
July 28 – August 2, 2012, San Diego, CA
IMS Annual Meeting @
2015 Joint Statistical Meetings
August 8–13, 2015
Seattle, Washington, USA
w http://amstat.org/meetings/jsm/2012/
w http://amstat.org/meetings/jsm.cfm
IMS sponsored meeting
The location for the 2014 IMS Annual
Meeting has been selected as Sydney,
Australia. Details will follow, but you can
mark your calendars now!
IMS co-sponsored meeting
w http://www.enar.org/meetings.cfm
IMS sponsored meeting
2013 ENAR/IMS Spring Meeting
March 10–13, 2013
Orlando, Florida, USA
Seventh Cornell Probability Summer School
July 11–22, 2011. Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
w http://www.enar.org/meetings.cfm
NEW WEBSITE http://www.math.duke.edu/~rtd/CPSS2011/index.html
IMS sponsored meeting
The 7th Cornell Probability Summer School will feature six lecture series by Marek Biskup
(UCLA), Geoffrey Grimmett (Cambridge) and Greg Lawler (Chicago). In addition
Omer Angel (UBC), Julien Dubedat (Columbia), Dmitry Ioffe (Technion), and Alan Sly
(Microsoft) will each give two lectures. The conference web page has more information,
and a registration form (deadline April 1). Accepted participants will have their dorm room
paid for. US participants can apply for $400 toward the cost of meals. This meeting is supported by an NSF Research Training Group grant to the probability group at Cornell.
2014 ENAR/IMS Spring Meeting
March 16–19, 2014
Baltimore, Maryland, USA
w http://www.enar.org/meetings.cfm
IMS co-sponsored meeting
35th Conference on Stochastic Processes and their Applications
June 19–25, 2011
Oaxaca, Mexico
International Symposium in Statistics (ISS)
on Longitudinal Data Analysis Subject
to Outliers, Measurement Errors, and/or
Missing Values
July 16–18, 2012
Memorial University, St. John’s, Canada
w http://www.matem.unam.mx/SPA2011/
w www.iss-2012-stjohns.ca
The 35th Conference on Stochastic Processes and their Applications is organized under
the auspices of the Bernoulli Society for Mathematical Statistics and Probability and
co-sponsored by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics. It will take place in the city of
Oaxaca, Mexico from the 19th to the 24th of June 2011. It is the major annual meeting for
researchers working in the field of Stochastic Processes and their Applications.
The conference covers a wide range of active research areas, in particular featuring 20
invited plenary lectures presented by leading specialists. In addition, there will be a large
variety of special sessions (consisting of three talks each), contributed sessions, contributed
talks and posters.
For further information, please see the webpage: http://www.matem.unam.mx/SPA2011/
or email: spa2011@matem.unam.mx
IMS Rep: Brajendra Sutradhar
IMS co-sponsored meeting
IMS co-sponsored meeting
Patient-Reported Outcomes and
Quality of Life
July 4–5, 2011
Université Pierre et Marie Curie,
Paris, France
IMS Rep: Mounir Mesbah
w http://www.lsta.upmc.fr/PROQOL/
30 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
More IMS meetings around the world
IMS sponsored meeting
IMS co-sponsored meeting
2012 World Congress/IMS Annual Meeting
July 9–14, 2012, Grand Cevahir Hotel & Convention Center, Istanbul, Turkey
2nd International Workshop on
Integer-Valued Time Series (WINTS 2011)
June 18–21, 2011
Protaras, Cyprus
w http://www.worldcong2012.org/
The eighth World Congress in Probability and Statistics will be held in Istanbul from
July 9 to 14, 2012. It is jointly organized by the Bernoulli Society and the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics. Scheduled every four years, this meeting is a major worldwide
event for statistics and probability, covering all its branches, including theoretical, methodological, applied and computational statistics and probability, and stochastic processes. It
features the latest scientific developments in these fields.
Contacts: Elvan Ceyhan and Mine Çağlar, Co-chairs of the Local Organizing
Committee; Arnoldo Frigessi, Chair of the Program Committee.
IMS co-sponsored meeting
Conference in Genetics, Probability and Statistics, in Honor of David Siegmund
June 17–18, 2011
Stanford University, Stanford, CA
IMS Reps: Jiayang Sun and Tze Lai
w http://stat.stanford.edu/gps11
w http://www2.ucy.ac.cy/~wints2011/
IMS Rep: Konstantinos Fokianos
The aim of this meeting is to bring researchers together to discuss their recent contributions to this area. The workshop will cover
topics such as integer autoregressive models
and their generalizations; generalized linear
models for time series; applications and case
studies.
NEW
IMS co-sponsored meeting
International Statistics Conference 2011
December 28–30, 2011
Colombo, Sri Lanka
This two-day conference GPS11 will be held at Stanford University in conjunction with
w TBC
the 3rd IWSM (International Workshop in Sequential Methodologies), June 14–16 at
Organized by the Applied Statistics
Stanford University[see announcement below]; and the WNAR/IMS meeting, June 19–22 at Association of Sri Lanka (ASASL). IMS
Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo, CA. GPS11 will feature invited lectures on advances and recent Rep: Peter Hall. The meeting location is
developments in probability, mathematical and applied statistics, statistical genetics, and
at the water’s edge in the capital city of Sri
computational biology, in honor of the 70th birthday of Professor David Siegmund.
Lanka. The website is under construction.
David Siegmund has made seminal contributions and left farranging impacts on these fields. He is the John T. and Sigrid Banks
IMS co-sponsored meeting
Professor of Statistics at Stanford University, a member of both the
16th INFORMS Applied Probability Society Conference
National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts
July 6–8, 2011, Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Stockholm,
and Sciences, and a Wilks medalist of the ASA. He is serving on
Sweden
the Scientific Advisory Board of American Institute of Mathematics w http://meetings.informs.org/APS2011
and the US National Mathematics committee. David was a Wald
The conference focuses on the theory and applications of probabillecturer and Rietz lecturer of IMS, and the president of both
ity to stochastic systems arising in operations research, computer
Bernoulli Society and the IMS, among many honors and services
networks, biology and finance, and also draws specialists in related
for the statistical profession and beyond.
fields such as statistics and physics. There will be sessions related to
The GPS11 registration deadline is June 6, 2011.
operations research, random graphs, random algorithms, stochastic
For more info, see http://stat/stanford.edu/gps11 or email
networks, stochastic control and games, mathematical finance,
siegmund-fest@googlegroups.com.
stochastic optimization, call centers, health care, simulation, etc.
Registration deadline May 1, 2011.
IMS co-sponsored meeting
Contacts: Henrik Hult, Kavita Ramanan, Marty Reiman (coThird International Workshop in Sequential Methodologies (IWSM)
chairs program committee); Tom Britton, Henrik Hult, Ingemar
Kaj, Filip Lindskog (local organizers)
June 14–16, 2011, Stanford University, Stanford, CA
IMS Rep: Tze Leung Lai
w http://iwsm2011.stanford.edu
April/May . 2011
IMS Bulletin . 31
IMS co-sponsored meeting
IMS sponsored meeting
NSF-CBMS Regional Research Conference:
Mathematical Epidemiology with Applications
July 25–29, 2011
East Tennessee State University, Johnson City, TN
IMS-China International Conference on Statistics and Probability
July 8–11, 2011
XiAn, China
w http://www.etsu.edu/cas/math/cbms.aspx
w http://www.stat.umn.edu/~statconf/imschina2011/index.html
Carlos Castillo-Chavez and Fred Brauer will give ten keynote lectures, and there will be breakout sessions and formation of working
research groups. A poster session will also be held for participants
to display their work. Full support will be offered to between 35
and 40 participants.
Please see the website for more details.
We are pleased to announce the 3rd IMS-China International
Conference on Statistics and Probability 2011 in XiAn, China. The
first two meetings in this series were held in Hangzhou (2008) and
WeiHai (2009), China.
The registration deadline is April 15.
If you live in China, contact Professor Geng Zhi (zhigeng@
pku.edu.cn) and Gong Fuzhou (fzgong@mail.amt.ac.cn) for more
information. If you live in other countries, send your enquiries in
English to Professor Heping Zhang (heping.zhang@yale.edu).
IMS co-sponsored meeting
IMS Organizing Chair: Heping Zhang, Yale University
NEW
WNAR/IMS Meeting
June 19–22, 2011
San Luis Obispo, California
IMS co-sponsored meeting
NEW WEBSITE: w http://statweb.calpoly.edu/WNAR2011
IMS Program Chair: Jay Bartroff e bartroff@usc.edu
The 2011 WNAR/IMS meeting will be held on the campus of Cal
Poly San Luis Obispo, located halfway between San Francisco and
Los Angeles. See http://www.calpoly.edu/visitors/visitors.html for
local information.
Registration is about to open! Please visit the website for
updates, and information about the student paper competition.
The local organizer is Jimmy Doi e jdoi@calpoly.edu
8th Workshop on Bayesian Nonparametrics
June 26–30, 2011
Veracruz, Mexico
w http://www.bnpworkshop.org/
The workshop aims at presenting the latest developments on
Bayesian nonparametric statistics, covering a wide range of theoretical, methodologic and applied areas. The meeting will be structured
in 4 tutorials on special topics, a series of invited and contributed
talks and contributed posters sessions. Some NSF and BNP2011
travel awards for young researchers are available.
IMS co-sponsored meeting
IMS Asia Pacific Rim Meeting
July 3–6, 2011
Tokyo, Japan
w http://www.ims-aprm2011.org/
The second IMS Asia Pacific Rim Meeting
will take place in OMIYA Sonic City
conference hall, Tokyo, Japan from July
3– 6, 2011. This conference is sponsored
by IMS, International Chinese Statistical
Association (ICSA), International Indian
Statistical Association (IISA), Japan
Statistical Society (JSS), Korean Statistical
Society (KSS) and the Institute of
Statistical Mathematics (ISM). This meeting
series provides an excellent forum for scientific communications and collaborations
for researchers in Asia and Pacific Rim. It
also promotes communication and collaboration between researchers in this area
and those from other parts of the world.
The program covers a wide range of topics
in statistics and probability, presenting
recent developments and the state of the
art in a variety of modern research topics
and in applications. Plenary speakers are
Peter Hall (University of Melbourne), and
S.R.S. Varadhan (New York University). A
number of celebrated scholars will deliver
distinguished lectures and invited talks in
this conference. Details on the website.
Contact the program chairs: Byeong U.
Park (bupark@stats.snu.ac.kr) and Runze Li
(rli@stat.psu.edu).
32 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
Other meetings around the world
Columbia-Princeton Probability Day 2011
Friday, April 15th, 2011
Princeton University
w http://orfe.princeton.edu/conferences/cp11/
Conference on Stochastic Analysis
in Finance and Insurance
May 17–20, 2011
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Southern Regional Council on Statistics
Summer Research Conference
June 5–8, 2011
Hickory Knob State Park, McCormick, SC
w http://sites.google.com/site/safimichigan/
Co-sponsored by NISS and ASA,
the annual SRCoS Summer Research
Conference is designed to bring together
statistical researchers at all levels to learn
about current areas of investigation and
trends in statistics, including statistics
education. The topics are necessarily broad,
with care taken to strike a balance between
statistical theory and its application to
scientific problems. The conference format
consists of morning, early afternoon, and
evening sessions, leaving late afternoons
open for recreation, informal professional
discussions and social interaction. Such
interactions are important for the development of new researchers and graduate students, whose participation via contributed
poster presentations is especially encouraged
(graduate student registration is free and
some travel funding is available).
This year’s program features sessions
on: multivariate methods and censored
regression; new directions in clinical trials;
effective teaching of introductory statistics/
biostatistics courses; statistical genetics;
analysis of large and high-dimensional
data; measurement error and latent variable modelling; and time ordered data.
Program Committee co-chairs: Edsel Peña
(University of South Carolina), Colin
Gallagher (Clemson University).
Hickory Knob State Park is a beautiful
state resort park on the shoreline of 70,000acre Strom Thurmond Reservoir on the
Savannah River.
Contact: Summer Research Conference
2011, Department of Statistics, University
of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208. t (803) 777-7800
2011 International Conference on Applied Statistics
May 26–27, 2011
Taipei, Taiwan
w http://www.ntpu.edu.tw/stat/chinese/academics/workshop/1000527-2011-statisticssymposium/index_e.html
The 2011 International Conference on Applied Statistics will be held in Taipei, Taiwan,
May 26–27, 2011. Hosted by the Chinese Statistics Association and co-sponsored by ICSA,
covering applied statistics topics especially biopharmaceutical statistics, this conference
aims to connect statisticians internationally, to share knowledge and ideas. For conference
information (including call for papers and registration), see the website.
Environmental Risk and Extreme Events
July 10–15, 2011
Ascona, Switzerland
w http://stat.epfl.ch/ascona2011
Climate change will affect the frequency
and severity of environmental extreme
events. This workshop will bring together
researchers in statistics of extremes and in
applied domains, to assess the state of the
art in statistical modelling of rare events, to
highlight emerging statistical ideas that may
be useful in applications, and to identify
challenging applied problems that need
innovative treatment. Contact: Anthony
Davison e anthony.davison@epfl.ch
PROBASTAT 2011
July 4–8, 2011
Smolenice, Slovak Republic
w http://www.um.sav.sk/en/probastat2011.
html
PROBASTAT 2011, the Sixth International
Conference on Probability and Statistics,
will be held in Smolenice Castle, Slovakia,
from July 4 to July 8, 2011. Contact: Viktor
Witkovsky e witkovsky@savba.sk
2011 International Workshop on Objective
Bayes Methodology (O-Bayes2011)
June 11–15, 2011
East China Normal Univ., Shanghai, China
w http://www.sfs.ecnu.edu.cn/obayes2011/
index.html
The principal objectives of OBayes2011
are to facilitate the exchange of recent
research developments in objective Bayes
methodology, to provide opportunities for
new researchers to shine, and to establish
new collaborations and partnerships that
will channel efforts into pending problems
and open new directions for further study.
O-Bayes2011 will also serve to further
crystallize objective Bayes methodology as
an established area for statistical research.
The workshop will consist of a tutorial
session, a series of invited talks followed by
discussion and a poster session dedicated to
contributed work. Please check the conference website for more information.
April/May . 2011
IMS Bulletin . 33
Young Statisticians Meeting (YSI 2011)
ISI Satellite Meeting
August 19–21, 2011
Dublin, Ireland
International Association for Official Statistics conference
“The Demography of Ageing and Official Statistics”
August 17–19, 2011
Belfast, Northern Ireland
w http://www.scss.tcd.ie/conferences/YSI2011
http://www.nisra.gov.uk/IAOS2011.html
As a satellite meeting to the 2011 ISI World
Congress, and the first of its kind, YSI 2011
seeks to promote the active participation of
early career statisticians in the epicentre of
the ISI World Congress.
The meeting will give the opportunity
for young statisticians to present their work
in an encouraging and heartening environment, build scientific bonds with colleagues
in their respective fields, and learn from
and interact with some of the leaders of
the discipline in an informal, compact and
conducive environment.
The conference will consist of 12 invited renowned speakers, including keynote speaker Dr
Richard Suzman (Director of Social Research at United States National Institute on Aging).
The Belfast IAOS conference is a satellite of the 2011 ISI biennial conference (see flyer
below). Bus transportation will be available to Dublin after this conference.
Nonparametrics and Geometry
August 15–19, 2011
Prague, Czech Republic
w http://nonparam11.karlin.mff.cuni.cz
The aim of the workshop is to bring
together a group of researchers in the areas
of Nonparametric Statistics, and Applied
Geometry. Contact: Daniel Hlubinka
e nonparam2011@karlin.mff.cuni.cz
useR! 2011
August 16–18, 2011
University of Warwick, Coventry, UK
w http://www.R-project.org/useR-2011
e useR-2011@R-project.org
A conference centred on the use of R for
data analysis and statistical computing.
The conference schedule comprises invited
lectures and user-contributed sessions. In
addition half-day tutorials presented by R
experts will run on August 15, 2011, prior
to the conference.
34 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
Graybill 2011 Conference “Modern Nonparametric Methods”
June 22–24, 2011
Hilton Hotel, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado
w http://www.stat.colostate.edu/graybillconference/
Well-developed nonparametric methods are an essential part of
modern data analysis, and an important and growing research topic
within statistics. The focus of the conference is on nonparametric
and semiparametric modeling and functional estimation methods.
The program consists of a short course, invited plenary talks and a
contributed poster session.
The conference will bring together some of the top researchers
in this area, and the topics of the presentations will range from
general overviews of relevant statistical material to more specialized
presentations of current developments. The focused yet relaxed
Calmer waters near Fort Collins, Colorado
nature of the conference will allow for concentrated discussion
and interaction among the participants. Following the conference,
there will be opportunities for various outdoor activities in the area.
In order to encourage students to participate, we are planning a student poster competi- Keynote Speakers:
tion, with the winners receiving travel support awards. The short course on semiparametric Jon Wellner, U. of Washington, Seattle
regression by Matt Wand will provide a hands-on introduction to the topics in the conferDavid Ruppert, Cornell U.
ence and is particularly suitable for students and other people interested in learning more
Jianqing Fan, Princeton U.
about smoothing methods.
Ingrid Van Keilegom, U. Catholique de
The conference is co-sponsored by the Department of Statistics at Colorado State
Louvain, Belgium
University and the ASA Section on Nonparametric Statistics.
If you have questions about the conference, send an email GraybillConference@Stat.
Invited Speakers:
Mouli Banerjee, U. of Michigan
ColoState.Edu. We look forward to welcoming you in Fort Collins and Northern Colorado!
Gerda Claeskens, Katholieke U. Leuven,
One of the post-conference activities on offer is whitewater rafting: see
http://www.stat.colostate.edu/graybillconference/Graybill%20PostConfActivities.html
Belgium
Aurore Delaigle, U. of Melbourne, Australia
Wenceslao Gonzalez-Manteiga, U. de
Santiago de Compostela, Spain
Joshua Habiger, Oklahoma State U.
Marc Hallin, U. Libre de Bruxelles,
Belgium
Geurt Jongbloed, Technische U. Delft,
Netherlands
Goran Kauermann, U. Bielefeld
Xihong Lin, Harvard U.
Reza Modarres, George Washington U.
Bodhisattva Sen, Columbia U.
Jiayang Sun, Case Western U.
Naisyin Wang, U. of Michigan
Yazhen Wang, U. of Wisconsin–Madison
Yuhong Yang, U. of Minnesota
Hui Zou, U. of Minnesota
April/May . 2011
2011 NISS/ASA Writing Workshop for Junior Researchers
Sunday 31 July & Wednesday 3 August at JSM Miami
w http://www.amstat.org/meetings/wwjr/
The National Institute of Statistical
Science (NISS) and
the ASA will hold
a writing workshop
at JSM for junior
researchers. The goal of the workshop is to provide instruction in how to write journal
articles and grant proposals. Participants will be required to provide a recent sample of
their writing, which will be reviewed by a senior mentor. The sample could be a current
draft of an article to be submitted for publication, or it could be an early version of a grant
proposal. (Submission of the manuscript will be required as part of the registration process.
Prior experience suggests that the best results come from submitting an early draft of something that is written solely or primarily by the participant.)
The mentors will be former journal editors and program officers, who will critique (a
portion of ) the submitted material. Individual feedback will be provided as part of the
opening session, and participants will be expected to prepare a revision in response. The
workshop will open with a one-day session of general instruction in effective writing techniques and will close with discussion and debriefing at a follow-up lunch.
The full-day session is scheduled for Sunday, July 31, in Miami Beach, FL. At the close
of the formal activities, mentors will meet individually with participants to go over the
writing samples they submitted. Each participant will then prepare a revision of a critiqued
portion of the paper and return this to the mentor by Tuesday evening, August 2. Mentors
and participants will meet again in conjunction with a lunch on Wednesday, August 3, to
discuss the success of the revisions. The lunch program will also include general feedback to
participants, mentors, and organizers.
Attendance will be limited and will depend on the number of mentors available.
Applications (see website above) are due by June 1, 2011, and successful applicants will be
notified by June 30. Applications received after June 1 will be considered if space is available. There is no fee for participation. Participants will receive lunch on Sunday, July 31,
and Wednesday, August 3. Participants must agree to attend both the full Sunday session
and the Wednesday lunch. We anticipate funding for partial travel support.
This workshop is designed for researchers with a recent Ph.D. in either statistics or biostatistics. Top priority will go to those who have held the Ph.D. for 0–3 years. The limited
available funding will be used to support attendance by researchers at U.S. institutions.
Current Ph.D. students who are completing their degree before the end of the summer
and who will be at US institutions in the fall will also be considered. If space is available,
researchers at institutions outside the US will be admitted to the workshop, but will not be
provided with travel support.
For more information see the website or contact Keith Crank, Research and Graduate
Education, American Statistical Association e keith@amstat.org
IMS Bulletin . 35
The First International Symposium on
System Informatics and Engineering
July 11–13, 2011
Qingdao, China
w http://issie2011.qdu.edu.cn
Due to significant advancement in
computer hardware/software technology
and automated data collection systems,
there are tremendous opportunities for
interdisciplinary research in combining
quantitative modeling (e.g., statistics, data
mining, machine learning, simulation, and
operation research) with technology-driven
engineering and domain knowledge to
make significant scientific, social, and
economic impacts. How to model, extract,
and make use of the hidden knowledge
based on the domain knowledge and the
vast data sources to improve overall system
performance, maintainability, and adaptability, poses many research and practical
challenges, defying the state of the art
methodological frameworks, algorithms,
and systems design and implementation
principles.
The purpose of the International
Symposium series on System Informatics
and Engineering (ISSIE) is to bring
together researchers and practitioners
interested in the theory and applications
of system-driven knowledge discovery and
design/operations improvement in a wide
range of domains and disciplines. Topics
of interest include but are not limited to:
System informatics principles and methods;
Informatics-driven system engineering
methods and applications; Data mining,
machine learning, and artificial intelligence;
Quality and reliability informatics and
engineering; System and network security;
Prognostics and system health management;
Bioinformatics, health and medical informatics; Industrial informatics and control;
Forecasting techniques and applications;
and Data-driven business intelligence and
customer relation management.
36 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
Third International Workshop on Internet Survey Methods
“Expansion of the Internet Survey and a Paradigm Shift for Statistical Production”
September 7–8, 2011
Statistical Center of Statistics Korea, Daejeon, South Korea
2011 New England Symposium on
Statistics in Sports
September 24, 2011
Cambridge, MA
w www.kostat.go.kr
w http://www.amstat.org/chapters/boston/
Call for Papers
nessis11.html
Statistics Korea’s 3rd International Workshop on Internet Survey Methods will take place at
the Statistical Center in Daejeon, Korea on September 7-8, 2011. The Workshop will focus
on the “Expansion of the Internet Survey and a Paradigm Shift for Statistical Production”
while bringing together statisticians from national statistical agencies from around the
world and methodologists from private organizations and universities. A wealth of major
issues will be discussed and we strongly believe that participants will be able to acquire
advanced knowledge, enriching both individuals and organizations. All those with a special
interest in statistical or methodological issues are welcome to this workshop.
We invite papers dealing with the following sub-themes:
• Workshop Theme: “Expansion of the Internet Survey and a Paradigm Shift for
Statistical Production”
• Major Issues and Challenges of the Internet Survey: Improvement of Accuracy and
Reliability
• Recent Research Trends in Survey Methodology
• Experiences of Official Statistics in Recent Survey Methods
• The Statistical Use of Administrative Data
Proposals for papers must be submitted online via email to azealia1@korea.kr by 6 May
2011. A proposal should include an abstract that does not exceed 500 words, excluding the
title, name(s) and affiliation(s).
Please note that the official language of the Workshop is English, and all presentations
must be delivered in this language.
Acceptance notification will be sent by the end of May. Speakers must submit their final
papers/presentations by 15 August 2011. This deadline should be met in order to publish
the proceedings of the Workshop.
We will provide speakers with a suitable amount of financial support.
Contact: Sangjin Park e sjpark92@korea.kr or Sujung Kim
This is a meeting of statisticians and quantitative analysts connected with sports teams,
sports media, and universities to discuss
common problems of interest in statistical
modeling and analysis of sports data. The
symposium format will be a mixture of
invited talks, a poster session, and a panel
discussion. One of the sponsors (StatDNA)
is holding a research competition on soccer
analytics, the winner earning a cash prize
and an invited speaker slot. A prize will also
be awarded to the best student poster.
Abstract submissions are due June 15,
2011.
e azealia1@korea.kr
w http://gpsd2012.uni-mainz.de/
10th German Probability and Statistics Days
2012 -- Stochastik-Tage Mainz
March 6–9, 2012
Mainz, Germany
2011 International Conference on Statistics and Probability
Commemorating the 40th anniversary of the Korean Statistical Society
July 1–2, 2011
Westin Chosun, Busan, Korea
w http://www.kss-icsp2011.org/main/
The conference is organized by the Korean Statistical Society and sponsored by Statistics Korea and Bank of Korea. The conference features
Peter Hall and S. R. S. Varadhan as keynote speakers and a number of invited sessions covering a wide range of topics in statistics and
probability. You are cordially invited to attend this two-day conference. Details are on the website.
Contact the organizing committee chair: Byeong U. Park (bupark@stats.snu.ac.kr or bupark2000@gmail.com)
April/May . 2011
IMS Bulletin . 37
Conference on Risk Assessment and Evaluation of Predictions
October 12–14, 2011
Washington DC/ Silver Spring MD
Third biennial International Statistical Ecology Conference
July 3–6, 2012
University of Oslo, Norway
w http://brac.umd.edu/~Risk2011/Main.htm
w http://www.cees.uio.no/news/2010/isec2012.html
The conference will cover a wide range of topics, including applications of risk models in cancer studies, assessing the accuracy of risk
models, competing risks models, evaluation of prediction models,
disease incidence and risk prediction in the population level,
genetic susceptibility risk models, individualized disease risk prediction, infectious diseases and epidemic risks, markers of disease genes
and clinical trials, model evaluation and validation, etc.
Confirmed invited speakers include: Elizabeth Claus, Yale
School of Public Health; Nilanjan Chatterjee, Chief, Biostatistics
Branch, DCGE, NCI; Chao Chen, USA Environmental Protection
Agency; Ralph D’Agostino, Boston University; Victor DeGruttola,
Harvard University; Jason Fine, University of North Carolina;
Andrew Freedman, Branch Chief, CTEB, NCI; Mitchell Gail,
Senior Investigator, DCGE, NCI; Holly Janes, Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center; Benjamin Kedem, University of
Maryland; Christoph Lange, Harvard University; Ker-Chau Li,
Statistical Institute, Academia Sinica, Taiwan; Giovani Parmigiani,
Harvard University; Margaret Pepe, University of Washington;
Ruth Pfeiffer, DCGE, NCI; Philip Rosenberg, Biostatistics Branch,
DCGE, NCI; Amir Sapkota, Maryland Institute of Applied
Environmental Health; Richard Simon, Biometric Branch, NCI;
Hajime Uno, Dana Farber Cancer Institute; Mei-Cheng Wang,
Johns Hopkins University; Sue Jane Wang, Food and Drug
Administration; Bruce Weir, University of Washington; George
Whitmore, McGill University; Grace Yang, University of Maryland.
In addition to invited and contributed sessions, two tutorials
will be given at the conference. Registered participants may attend
these tutorials without additional fee. Specifically, Drs. Mitchell
Gail and Ruth Pfeiffer will present “Absolute Risk Prediction”; and
Dr. Margaret Pepe will present “Current Methods for Evaluating
Prediction Performance of Biomarkers and Tests”.
The deadline for submitting abstracts for contributed papers
and posters is July 30, 2011. Papers presented at the conference
may be considered for publication in Lifetime Data Analysis. For
further information on topics, registration, accommodations,
etc. please visit the conference website or contact the Conference
Organizer, Prof. Mei-Ling Ting Lee e mltlee@umd.edu
First Announcement
The third biennial International Statistical Ecology Conference
will be held 3–6 July, 2012, hosted by the Centre for Ecological
and Evolutionary Synthesis at the Department of Biology of the
University of Oslo. The conference location will be the Sundvolden
Hotel outside Oslo.
We have an extraordinary group of plenary speakers, whose
general topics are:
Nils Chr. Stenseth, Univ. of Oslo (Norway): Opening remarks
Steinar Engen, Norwegian Univ. of Science and Technology
(Norway): stochastic age-structured modelling, including
dynamics, genetics and some estimation
Rachel Fewster, Univ. of Auckland (N.Z.): genetics in statistical
ecology
Joanne Flemming, Dalhousie University (Canada): The Ocean
Tracking Network: visualization tools and novel analyses for
acoustic tracking data
Otso Ovaskainen, Univ. of Helsinki (Finland): the analysis of
spatial data: individual movements and species and community
models
Andre Punt, Univ. of Washington (USA): estimating precautionary
thresholds for US west coast fisheries
Andy Royle, Patuxent Wildlife Research Center (USA):
Incorporating auxiliary spatial information in capture-recapture
models
Len Thomas, Univ. of St. Andrews (UK): The future of statistical
ecology
Workshops in the area of ecological statistics will also be
conducted at the venue just prior to the conference. We will also be
soliciting contributed talks and poster presentations; we will begin
accepting abstracts in the second half of 2011. Further details are
available at the conference website.
Please place the dates of this conference into your diaries (3–6
July 2012) and visit the conference website for updates and further
information.
Contact: Tore Schweder (for the Local Organising Committee)
38 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
Other meetings around the world
SAMSI Interdisciplinary Workshop for Undergraduates and Faculty
May 16–20, 2011 in Research Triangle Park, NC
http://www.samsi.info/workshop/interdisciplinary-workshopundergraduate-students-and-faculty-may-16-20-2011
SAMSI 2011 Industrial Math/Stat Modeling Workshop for Graduate
Students
July 7–15, 2011 in Raleigh, NC at NCSU
http://www.samsi.info/workshop/2011-industrial-mathstat-modelingworkshop-graduate-students-july-7-15-2011
Methodology Opening Workshop
September 7–10, 2011 in Research Triangle Park, NC
http://www.samsi.info/workshop/2011-12-program-uncertainty-
SAMSI/Sandia Summer School for Uncertainty Quantification
June 20–24, 2011 in Albuquerque, NM
quantification-opening-workshop-and-tutorials
http://www.samsi.info/workshop/samsisandia-summer-school-
SAMSI 2011–2012 Uncertainty Quantification Program:
Engineering and Renewable Energy Opening Workshop
September 19–21, 2011 in Research Triangle Park, NC
uncertainty-quantification
SAMSI 2011–2012 Uncertainty Quantification Program:
Climate Modeling Opening Workshop
August 29–31, 2011 in Pleasanton, CA
http://www.samsi.info/workshop/uq-engineering-and-renewable-
http://www.samsi.info/workshop/2011-12-uq-program-climatemodeling-opening-workshop
SAMSI 2011–2012 Uncertainty Quantification Program:
Geosciences Applications Opening Workshop
September 21–23, 2011 in Research Triangle Park, NC
SAMSI 2011–2012 Uncertainty Quantification Program:
http://www.samsi.info/workshop/2011-12-uq-program-geosciences-
energy-workshop-september-19-21-2011
applications-opening-workshop
Employment Opportunities around the world
Chile: Santiago
United Kingdom: Cambridge
Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Department of Statistics
University of Cambridge
Assistant Professor of Statistics
Research Associateships in Probability Theory
http://jobs.imstat.org/c/job.cfm?site_id=1847&jb=7746048
http://jobs.imstat.org/c/job.cfm?site_id=1847&jb=7794166
Switzerland: Lausanne
United Kingdom: Glasgow
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne (EPFL)
University of Glasgow, School of Mathematics & Statistics
Postdoctoral Position(s) in Statistics/Applied Probability at EPFL
Chair of Statistics
http://jobs.imstat.org/c/job.cfm?site_id=1847&jb=7797544
http://jobs.imstat.org/c/job.cfm?site_id=1847&jb=7720195
Switzerland: Zurich
United States: Champaign, IL
KOF Swiss Economic Institute/ETH Zurich
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Time Series Specialist
Visiting Assistant Professor
http://jobs.imstat.org/c/job.cfm?site_id=1847&jb=7722272
http://jobs.imstat.org/c/job.cfm?site_id=1847&jb=7673675
::: Advertise current job opportunities for only $215 for 45 days ::: See http://jobs.imstat.org for details :::
April/May . 2011
IMS Bulletin . 39
International Calendar of Statistical Events
IMS meetings are highlighted in maroon with the
logo, and new or updated entries have the NEW or UPDATED symbol. t means
telephone, f fax, e email and w website. Please submit your meeting details and any corrections to Elyse Gustafson at erg@imstat.org
April 2011
April 11–13: Bordeaux, France. 3rd International Biometrics Society
Channel Network Conference. e ibschannel@isped.u-bordeaux2.fr
w http://www.ibs-channel-bordeaux2011.fr
NEW
April 15: Princeton University. Columbia-Princeton Prob-
ability Day 2011 w http://orfe.princeton.edu/conferences/cp11/
April 16: Storrs, Connecticut. 25th New England Statistics
Symposium w www.stat.uconn.edu/ness11
April 21–24: NC State University, Raleigh, NC, USA. 2011
IISA Conference on Probability, Statistics and Data Analysis.
w http://www.iisaconference.info
April 29 – May 1: Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA.
Graduate Student Probability Conference w http://gspc.math.gatech.edu/
May 2011
May 8–12: Houston, Texas. 4th Lehmann Symposium
w www.stat.rice.edu/~jrojo/4th-Lehmann
May 16–20: SAMSI, Research Triangle Park, NC. Education and
Outreach Program: Interdisciplinary Workshop for Graduates w http://www.samsi.info
May 17–20: Ann Arbor, Michigan. Conference on Stochastic Analysis in Finance and Insurance Modeling and Simulation International Conference: CHAOS2011
w www.cmsim.org
June 2011
NEW
June 5–8: Hickory Knob State Park, McCormick, SC.
Southern Regional Council on Statistics Summer Research Conference t (803) 777-7800
June 5–10: Ascona, Switzerland. Workshop on Statistical
Challenges and Biomedical Applications of Deep Sequencing
Data w http://www.cbg.ethz.ch/news/ascona2011
June 7–10: Università La Sapienza, Rome, Italy. ASMDA 2011:
XIV International Conference on Applied Stochastic Models and
Data Analysis w www.asmda.eu
NEW
June 11–15: East China Normal Univ., Shanghai, China.
2011 International Workshop on Objective Bayes Methodology
(O-Bayes2011) w http://www.sfs.ecnu.edu.cn/obayes2011/index.html
June 12–15: Wolfville, Nova Scotia, Canada. 2011 SSC Annual
Meeting w http://www.ssc.ca/en/meetings/2011
June 13–17: Penn State University, USA. Statistical Challenges
in Modern Astronomy V. w http://astrostatistics.psu.edu
June 13–17: Firenze/Florence, Italy. 4th La Pietra week in Probability at Finaly. w http://php.math.unifi.it/users/paf/LaPietra2011
NEW
w http://sites.google.com/site/safimichigan/
May 19–20: Hasselt University, Belgium. International Symposium
on Recent Advances in Statistics and Probability w www.uhasselt.be/ISRASP
May 24–27: Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. High
Dimensional Statistics: Advances and Challenges
w http://www1.spms.ntu.edu.sg/~stats
June 13–17: Norrfällsviken, Sweden. 3rd Baltic-Nordic Conference
on Survey Statistics (BaNoCoSS) w http://www.mathstat.helsinki.fi/msm/banocoss/2011/
June 14–16: Stanford University, CA. 3rd International Workshop
in Sequential Methodologies (IWSM) w http://iwsm2011.stanford.edu
June 17-18: Stanford, CA. Conference in Genetics, Probability
and Statistics, in Honor of David Siegmund w http://stat.stanford.edu/gps11
NEW
May 26–27: Taipei, Taiwan. 2011 International Confer-
ence on Applied Statistics w http://www.ntpu.edu.tw/stat/chinese/
academics/workshop/1000527-2011-statistics-symposium/index_e.html
June 18–21: Protaras, Cyprus. WINTS2011: 2nd
International Workshop on Integer-Valued Time Series w http://
www2.ucy.ac.cy/~wints2011/
May 31 – June 3: Agios Nikolaos, Crete, Greece. 4th Chaotic
Continues on page 40
40 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
International Calendar continued
June 2011 continued
June 19–22: San Luis Obispo, California. WNAR/IMS Meeting. NEW WEBSITE: http://statweb.calpoly.edu/WNAR2011
June 19–25: Oaxaca, Mexico. 35th Conference on Stochastic
Processes and their Applications. w http://www.matem.unam.mx/
SPA2011/
June 20-24: Beijing Institute of Technology, China. Seventh International Conference on Mathematical Methods in Reliability
w www.mmr2011.cn
July 6–8: Stockholm, Sweden. INFORMS Applied Prob-
ability Society Conference w http://www.informs.org/Community/
Conferences/APS2011
July 8–11: XiAn, China. IMS-China International Conference on Statistics and Probability. IMS Organizing Chair: Heping
Zhang. w http://www.stat.umn.edu/~statconf/imschina2011/index.
html
July 10–15: Ascona, Switzerland. Environmental Risk and
Extreme Events w http://stat.epfl.ch/ascona2011
NEW
July 11–13: Qingdao, China. The First International Symposium on System Informatics and Engineering w http://issie2011.
NEW
June 20–24: Institut Elie Cartan, Nancy, France. Journées de
Probabilités 2011 w http://jp2011.iecn.u-nancy.fr/ (in French)
NEW
qdu.edu.cn
June 22–24: Fort Collins, Colorado. Graybill 2011 Con-
ference “Modern Nonparametric Methods” w http://www.stat.
colostate.edu/graybillconference/
June 26–29: New York City, NY, USA. ICSA 2011 Applied
Statistics Symposium. w http://www.icsa.org/2011/
June 26–30: Veracruz, Mexico. 8th Workshop on Bayesian
July 11–22: Ithaca, NY. 7th Cornell Probability Summer
School. w http://www.duke.cornell.edu/~rtd/CPSS2011/
July 18–19: Vancouver, Canada. ICIAM 2011: AWM Workshop
for Women Graduate Students and Recent PhDs. Deadline
has passed w https://sites.google.com/site/awmmath/programs/
workshops/ICIAM-workshop
Nonparametrics. w http://www.bnpworkshop.org/
July 18–22: Vancouver, Canada. ICIAM 2011: 7th International
June 27 – July 1: University of Lyon, France. 7th Conference on
Congress on Industrial and Applied Mathematics
Extreme Value Analysis, Probabilistic and Statistical Models and
their Applications (EVA 2011) w http://eva2011.univ-lyon1.fr/
June 27 – July 1: Valladolid, Spain. ICORS 2011: International
Conference on Robust Statistics e congreso.icors2011@uva.es
w http://www.icors11.uva.es
July 2011
NEW
July 1–2: Westin Chosun, Busan, Korea. 2011 International
Conference on Statistics and Probability and 40th anniversary of
the Korean Statistical Society w http://www.kss-icsp2011.org/main/
July 1–4: Montreal, Canada. Statistics 2011 Canada / IMST-2011-
FIM XX w http://www.stat2011.ca
July 3–6: Tokyo, Japan. IMS Asia Pacific Rim Meetings. w
http://www.ims-aprm2011.org/
July 4–5: Paris, France. Patient-Reported Outcomes and
Quality of Life. w http://www.lsta.upmc.fr/PROQOL/
w http://www.iciam2011.com/
July 18–26: SAMSI, Research Triangle Park, NC. Education and
Outreach Program: Industrial Math/Stat Modeling Workshop for
Graduate Students w http://www.samsi.info
July 21–23: Bangkok, Thailand. 7th IMT-GT International Con-
ference on Mathematics, Statistics and its Application (ICMSA
2011) w http://icmsa2011.nida.ac.th
July 25–29: East Tennessee State University, Johnson City,
TN. NSF-CBMS Regional Research Conference: Mathematical
Epidemiology with Applications w http://www.etsu.edu/cas/math/cbms.aspx
July 27–31: Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken,
New Jersey. Conference on Modeling High Frequency Data in
Finance 3 w http://kolmogorov.math.stevens.edu/conference2011/
NEW
July 30 – August 4: Miami Beach, Florida. IMS Annual
Meeting at JSM2011. w http://amstat.org/meetings/jsm/2011/
April/May . 2011
NEW
July 31 & August 3: at JSM Miami. 2011 NISS/ASA Writ-
ing Workshop for Junior Researchers w http://www.amstat.org/
meetings/wwjr/
August 2011
August 1–4: Boulder, Colorado, USA. Uncertainty Quantification
in Scientific Computing. w http://www.nist.gov/itl/math/ifipwoco-10.cfm
August 1–5: Sandbjerg Estate, Sønderborg, Denmark. Conference
in Honour of Søren Asmussen: New Frontiers in Applied Probability w www.thiele.au.dk/asmussen
August 11–13: University of Connecticut, Storrs, USA. 46th
Actuarial Research Conference. w http://www.math.uconn.
edu/~valdez/46arc/46arc-storrs.php
NEW
August 15–19: Prague, Czech Republic. Nonparametrics
and Geometry w http://nonparam11.karlin.mff.cuni.cz
NEW
August 16–18: University of Warwick, Coventry, UK. useR!
2011 w http://www.R-project.org/useR-2011
IMS Bulletin . 41
NEW
September 7–8: Statistical Center of Statistics Korea,
Daejeon, South Korea. Third International Workshop on Internet
Survey Methods w www.kostat.go.kr
September 12 – December 16: Institute for Pure and
Applied Mathematics, Los Angeles, USA. Mathematical and
Computational Approaches in High-Throughput Genomics
w www.ipam.ucla.edu/programs/gen2011/
September 13–16: Jaca, Spain. Statistics, Probability and
Operations Research (SPO 2011) w http://metodosestadisticos.
unizar.es/~jaca2011
NEW
September 24: Cambridge, MA. 2011 New England Sym-
posium on Statistics in Sports w http://www.amstat.org/chapters/
boston/nessis11.html
October 2011
NEW
October 3–4: ETH Zurich, Switzerland. Colloquium
in honor of Hans Rudolf Künsch on the occasion of his 60th
birthday w https://stat.ethz.ch/events/Colloquium_Kuensch
October 12–14: Washington DC/ Silver Spring MD. Conference on Risk Assessment and Evaluation of Predictions w http://
NEW
NEW
August 17–19: Belfast, Northern Ireland. International
Association for Official Statistics conference “The Demography of
Ageing and Official Statistics” w http://www.nisra.gov.uk/IAOS2011.
October 18–20: Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, Mass. 2011
html
August 17–19: Copenhagen, Denmark. Dynamic Statistical Models
[ISI Satellite Meeting] w http://statistics.ku.dk/isi-satellite/
NEW
brac.umd.edu/~Risk2011/Main.htm
August 19–21: Dublin, Ireland. Young Statisticians Meet-
ing (YSI 2011) ISI Satellite Meeting w http://www.scss.tcd.ie/
conferences/YSI2011
August 21–26: Dublin, Ireland. ISI Dublin: 58th World Statistics
Congress w www.isi2011.ie
August 29 – September 1: Washington DC, USA. 7th International
Conference on Multiple Comparison Procedures Non-clinical Biostatistics Conference w http://www.hsph.harvard.
edu/ncb2011/
November 2011
November 7–9: Łódź, Poland. Multivariate Statistical Analysis
Conference w http://www.msa.uni.lodz.pl
November 25–27: Lahore, Pakistan. 3rd International Conference
on Statistical Sciences w http://www.icss3.co.nr/
w http://www.mcp-conference.org
December 2011
September 2011
December 28–30: Colombo, Sri Lanka. International
Statistics Conference 2011. w TBC
September 5–9: Lisbon, Portugal. 17th European Young
Statisticians Meeting w http://www.fct.unl.pt/17eysm
Continues on page 42
42 . IMS Bulletin
Volume 40 . Issue 3
International Calendar continued
December 2011 continued
December 28–31: Hong Kong, China. International Conference
on Advances in Probability and Statistics Theory and Applications: A celebration of N. Balakrishnan’s 30 years of contributions
to statistics. e icaps2011@gmail.com w http://faculty.smu.edu/ngh/
icaps2011.html
April 2012
April 1–4: Washington DC, USA. 2012 ENAR/IMS Spring
Meetings. w http://www.enar.org/meetings.cfm
April 18–20: Poznań, Poland. International Congress of Polish
July 2013
July 29 – August 2: University of Colorado, Boulder,
NEW
USA. 36th Conference on Stochastic Processes and their Applications w TBC
August 2013
August 3–8: Montréal, Canada. IMS Annual Meeting at
JSM2013. w http://amstat.org/meetings/jsm/
March 2014
Statistics to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Polish Statistical
Association w http://www.stat.gov.pl/pts/
March 16–19: Baltimore, Maryland. 2014 ENAR/IMS Spring
Meeting. w http://www.enar.org/meetings.cfm
June 2012
July 2014
June 3–6: Guelph, Ontario, Canada. SSC Annual Meeting w TBC
June 23–26: Boston, MA, USA. ICSA 2012 Applied Statistics
Symposium. w TBC
July 2012
July 3–6: University of Oslo, Norway. Third biennial
International Statistical Ecology Conference NEW
w http://www.cees.uio.no/news/2010/isec2012.html
July 7–11: Sydney, Australia. 2014 IMS Annual Meeting.
w TBC
August 2014
August 2–7: Boston, MA. JSM2014. w TBC
August 2015
August 8–13: Seattle, WA. JSM2015. w TBC
July 9–14: Istanbul, Turkey. IMS Annual Meeting 2012 in
conjunction with 8th World Congress in Probability and Statistics.
w http://www.worldcong2012.org/
July 16–18: Memorial University, St. John’s, Canada. International Symposium in Statistics (ISS) on Longitudinal Data
Analysis Subject to Outliers, Measurement Errors, and/or Missing
Values w www.iss-2012-stjohns.ca
July 28 – August 2: San Diego, California. JSM2012.
w http://amstat.org/meetings/jsm/2012/index.cfm
March 2013
March 10–13: Orlando, Florida. 2013 ENAR/IMS Spring
Meeting. w http://www.enar.org/meetings.cfm
Are we missing something? If you know of
any statistics or probability meetings which
aren’t listed here, please let us know. Email
the details to Elyse Gustafson at erg@imstat.
org. We’ll list them here in the
Bulletin, and online too, at
www.imstat.org/meetings
April/May . 2011
Membership and Subscription Information
Journals
The scientific journals of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics are
The Annals of Statistics, The Annals of Probability, The Annals of Applied
Statistics, The Annals of Applied Probability, and Statistical Science. The
IMS Bulletin is the news organ of the Institute.
Individual and Organizational Memberships
Each individual member receives the IMS Bulletin (print and/or
electronic) and may elect to receive one or more of the five scientific
journals. Members pay annual dues of $103. An additional $53 is
added to the dues of members for each scientific journal selected.
Reduced membership dues are available to full-time students, new
graduates, permanent residents of countries designated by the IMS
Council, and retired members. Organizational memberships are
available to departments, corporations, government agencies and
other similar research institutions at $155 per year.
Individual and General Subscriptions
Subscriptions are available on a calendar-year basis. Individual
subscriptions are for the personal use of the subscriber and must
be in the name of, paid directly by, and mailed to an individual.
Individual subscriptions for 2011 are available to The Annals of
Applied Probability ($166), The Annals of Applied Statistics ($166), The
Annals of Probability ($166), The Annals of Statistics ($166), Statistical
Science ($146), and IMS Bulletin ($113). General subscriptions
are for libraries, institutions, and any multiple-readership use.
General subscriptions for 2011 are available to The Annals of Applied
Probability ($360), The Annals of Applied Statistics ($320), The Annals
of Probability ($360), The Annals of Statistics ($390), Statistical Science
($210), and IMS Bulletin ($95). Airmail rates for delivery outside
North America are $109 per title.
IMS Bulletin
The IMS Bulletin publishes articles and news of interest to IMS
members and to statisticians and probabilists in general, as well as
details of IMS meetings and an international calendar of statistical
events. Views and opinions in editorials and articles are not to be
understood as official expressions of the Institute’s policy unless so
stated; publication does not necessarily imply endorsement in any
way of the opinions expressed therein, and the IMS Bulletin and its
publisher do not accept any responsibility for them. The IMS Bulletin
is copyrighted and authors of individual articles may be asked to sign
a copyright transfer to the IMS before publication.
The IMS Bulletin (ISSN 1544-1881) is published eight times per year
in January/February, March, April/May, June/July, August, September,
October/November and December, by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics, 3163 Somerset Dr, Cleveland, Ohio 44122, USA.
Periodicals postage paid at Cleveland, Ohio, and at additional mailing
offices. Postmaster: Send address changes to Institute of Mathematical
Statistics, 9650 Rockville Pike, Suite L3503A, Bethesda, MD 208143998.
Copyright © 2011 by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics.
Printed by The Sheridan Press, 450 Fame Avenue, Hanover, PA
17331, USA.
IMS Bulletin . 43
Information for Advertisers
General information: The IMS Bulletin and webpages are the
official news organs of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics. The
IMS Bulletin, established in 1972, is published 10 times per year.
Circulation is over 5,000 paper copies. The Bulletin is also available
free online in PDF format at http://bulletin.imstat.org, usually
posted online about two weeks before mailout. Subscription to the
IMS Bulletin costs $90. To subscribe, call 877-557-4674 (US tollfree) or +1 216 295 2340 (international), or email staff@imstat.org.
The IMS website, http://imstat.org, established in 1996, receives
over 30,000 visits per month. Public access is free.
Advertising job vacancies
A single 45-day online job posting costs $215.00. We will also
include the basic information about your job ad (position title,
location, company name, job function and a link to the full ad) in
the IMS Bulletin at no extra charge. See http://jobs.imstat.org
Advertising meetings, workshops and conferences
Meeting announcements in the Bulletin and on the IMS website at
http://imstat.org/meetings are free. Send them to Elyse Gustafson;
see http://www.imstat.org/program/prog_announce.htm
Rates and requirements for display advertising
Display advertising allows for placement of camera-ready ads for
journals, books, software, etc. A camera-ready ad should be sent as
a grayscale PDF/EPS with all fonts embedded. Email your advert to
Audrey Weiss, IMS Advertising Coordinator admin@imstat.org or
see http://bulletin.imstat.org/advertise
Dimensions: width x height
Rate
1/3 page
4.93" x 4" (125.2 x 102 mm)
$215
1/2 page
7.5" x 4" (190 x 102 mm)
$270
2/3 page
4.93" x 8" (125.2 x 203 mm)
$325
Full page (to edge, including 1/8" bleed)
8.75" x 11.25" (222 mm x 285.8 mm)
$380
Full page (within usual
7.5" x 9.42" (190 mm x 239.3 mm)
Bulletin margins)
$380
Deadlines and Mail Dates for IMS Bulletin
Issue
Deadline
Online by
Mailed
1: 2: 3: 4: 5: 6: 7: 8: December 1
February 1
March 15
May 1
July 1
August 15
September 15
November 1
December 15
February 15
April 1
May 15
July 15
September 1
October 1
November 15
January 1
March 1
April 15
June 1
August 1
September 15
October 15
December 1
January/February
March
April/May
June/July
August
September
Oct/Nov
December
next
issue is
the
June/July
2011
May 15,
then July 1
Please see inside
the back cover for
subscription details
and information for
advertisers, including
all our deadlines and
requirements
THE ANNALS
of
APPLIED
PROBABILITY
AN OFFICIAL JOURNAL OF THE
I NSTITUTE OF M ATHEMATICAL S TATISTICS
Articles
Affine processes on positive semidefinite matrices
C HRISTA C UCHIERO , DAMIR F ILIPOVI Ć , E BERHARD M AYERHOFER
AND J OSEF T EICHMANN
Nonnormal approximation by Stein’s method of exchangeable pairs with application
to the Curie–Weiss model . . . . . . . . . . . . . S OURAV C HATTERJEE AND Q I -M AN S HAO
Heavy traffic analysis for EDF queues with reneging
Ł UKASZ K RUK , J OHN L EHOCZKY, K AVITA R AMANAN AND S TEVEN S HREVE
Limit theorems for power variations of pure-jump processes with application
to activity estimation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . V IKTOR T ODOROV AND G EORGE TAUCHEN
The Longstaff–Schwartz algorithm for Lévy models:
Results on fast and slow convergence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S TEFAN G ERHOLD
Hybrid Atlas models
T OMOYUKI I CHIBA , VASSILIOS PAPATHANAKOS , A DRIAN BANNER ,
I OANNIS K ARATZAS AND ROBERT F ERNHOLZ
On the transition from heavy traffic to heavy tails for the M/G/1 queue:
The regularly varying case . . . . . . M ARIANA O LVERA -C RAVIOTO , J OSE B LANCHET
AND P ETER G LYNN
Sampling conditioned hypoelliptic diffusions
M ARTIN H AIRER , A NDREW M. S TUART AND J OCHEN VOSS
Traveling waves of selective sweeps . . . . . . . . . . . R ICK D URRETT AND J OHN M AYBERRY
Diffusion limits of limited processor sharing queues
J IHENG Z HANG , J. G. DAI AND B ERT Z WART
Journal
alerts
For alerts and special
information on all the
IMS journals, sign up
at the IMS Lists site
http://lists.imstat.org
ap
submissions
ISSN (1050-5164)
o
11 /a
20 org
ril lid.
Ap uc
AP cte
AO roje
p
DEADLINES
for
IMS: Organized September 12, 1935
://
Send in your ideas,
articles, and letters… We love to hear from you!
purpose of the Institute is to foster the
development and dissemination
of the theory and applications of
statistics and probability
The
tp
ht
Meeting reports, news
of members, information
and announcements about conferences, and
jobs around the world.
Volume 40 . Issue 3
Vol. 21, No. 2—April 2011
397
464
484
546
589
609
645
669
699
745
Download