词条 | Noel Cressie |
释义 |
Noel Cressie (born 1950 in Fremantle, Australia) is an Australian and American statistician.[1][2] He is a Distinguished Professor and Director, Centre for Environmental Informatics, at the University of Wollongong in Wollongong, Australia. Cressie is best known for having brought disparate statistical methodologies into a nascent discipline known as Spatial Statistics. In his widely cited book, Statistics for Spatial Data,[3] Cressie established a general spatial model that unified statistics for geostatistical data, regular and irregular lattice data, point patterns, and random sets. Since the 1980s, he has been a developer of statistical theory, methodology and applications for spatial and spatio-temporal data. Since the 2000s, this methodology has emphasized hierarchical statistical modeling, which was integrated into his most recent book Statistics for Spatio-Temporal Data.[4] It has been applied in areas of ‘big science,’ such as remote sensing of Earth on a global scale,[5] understanding the global carbon cycle and its effect on climate change,[6] Greenland ice-sheet dynamics,[7] and disease mapping.[8] Cressie was trained in Australia and the USA and obtained his Ph.D. in Statistics from Princeton University, USA, advised by Geoffrey Watson and taught by both Watson and John Tukey. He has spent the majority of his professional life in the USA as professor and distinguished professor at both Iowa State University and The Ohio State University. Since 2012, he has been professor and distinguished professor at the University of Wollongong, Australia. Over the course of his statistical career, Cressie has written or coauthored three books and more than 250 articles in scholarly journals.[9] His accomplishments have made him the recipient of a number of awards, including Fellow of the American Statistical Association (ASA),[10] Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics,[11] Fellow of the Spatial Econometrics Association,[12] and Elected Member of the International Statistical Institute.[13] In 2009, he received one of the highest awards in statistical science, the R.A. Fisher Lectureship, from the Committee of Presidents of Statistical Societies (COPSS). His book, “Statistics for Spatio-Temporal Data” (2011), by Noel Cressie and Christopher K. Wikle, received two awards: the 2011 PROSE Award in the Mathematics category (for PROfessional and Scholarly Excellence, given by the Association of American Publishers); and the 2013 DeGroot Book Prize (awarded every two years by the International Society for Bayesian Analysis). More recently, Cressie was awarded the Pitman Medal[14] in 2014 by the Statistical Society of Australia in recognition of his outstanding achievement in, and contribution to, the discipline of Statistics. In 2016, he received the Barnett Award by the Royal Statistical Society for excellence in environmental statistics.[15] He was selected to deliver the Georges Matheron Lecture in 2017[16] by the International Association for Mathematical Geosciences. In 2018 Cressie was elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science (FAA).[17] His later work is in environmental informatics, emphasizing uncertainty quantification and using tools from the fields of Statistics, Mathematics, Computing, and Visualization. His main area of application has been in remote sensing of the environment, and this initiative has continued into the second stage of his professional career in Australia. Selected publications
References1. ^Google Scholar Profile (https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=BTVSL8cAAAAJ&hl=en) 2. ^Curriculum vitae (https://works.bepress.com/noel_cressie/cv/download/) 3. ^Statistics for Spatial Data, by Noel Cressie. John Wiley, New York, 1991, 900p. (https://scholar.google.com/citations?view_op=view_citation&hl=en&user=BTVSL8cAAAAJ&citation_for_view=BTVSL8cAAAAJ:QsaTk4IG4EwC) 4. ^Statistics for Spatio-Temporal Data, by Noel Cressie and Christopher K. Wikle. Wiley, Hoboken, NJ, 2011, 588 p. 5. ^Interview of Noel Cressie, “Statistics for spatial and spatio-temporal data” (2013). methods.blog, the official blog of Methods in Ecology and Evolution, appears on YouTube. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kCIxA1pkiOM). 6. ^Interview of Noel Cressie, “NASA satellite to search for climate change clues” (2014). ABC Radio National’s Drive program with Waleed Aly, Thursday, 3 July 2014. (http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/drive/nasa-satellite-to-search-for-climate-change-clues/5570044). 7. ^Box, J.E., Cressie, N., Bromwich, D.H., Jung, J-H., van den Broeke, M., Van Angelen, J.H., Forster, R., Miege, C., Mosley-Thompson, E., Vinther, B., and McConnell, J.R. (2013). Greenland ice sheet mass balance reconstruction. Part I: net snow accumulation (1600-2009). Journal of Climate 25, 3919-3934. 8. ^Zhuang, L. and Cressie, N. (2012). Spatio-temporal modeling of sudden infant death syndrome data. Statistical Methodology, 9, 117-143. 9. ^Curriculum vitae (https://works.bepress.com/noel_cressie/cv/download/). 10. ^Fellows of the American Statistical Association (http://www.amstat.org/awards/fellows.cfm). 11. ^Fellows of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/awards/honored_fellows.htm#C). 12. ^Fellows of the Spatial Econometrics Association (http://www.spatialeconometricsassociation.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=61&Itemid=90). 13. ^International Statistics Institute (https://www.isi-web.org/index.php/about-isi/who-is-isi/members/indivual). 14. ^http://www.statsoc.org.au/awards/pitman-medal/ 15. ^Barnett Lecture at RSS 2016 (https://www.statslife.org.uk/events/conference-blog/2737-noel-cressie-to-deliver-barnett-lecture-at-rss-2016). 16. ^https://www.iamg.org/images/File/documents/Newsletters/NewslettersHSP/NL93lo.pdf 17. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.science.org.au/fellowship/fellows/professor-noel-cressie|title=Professor Noel Cressie {{!}} Australian Academy of Science|website=www.science.org.au|access-date=2018-06-16}} External links
5 : 1950 births|Living people|Australian statisticians|Fellows of the American Statistical Association|Fellows of the Australian Academy of Science |
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