Mark van der Laan
homepage:http://www.stat.berkeley.edu/~laan/Laan/laan.html
search externally:   Google Scholar,   Springer,   CiteSeer,   Microsoft Academic Search,   Scirus ,   DBlife

Description

Mark van der Laan , Ph.D. is a Professor of Biostatistics and Statistics at UC Berkeley. His research interests include statistical methods in genomics (i.e., computational biology), survival analysis, censored data, semiparametric models and causal inference, data adaptive loss based estimation, and multiple testing. Details about Mark's education, experience, and publications can be found in his CV.

Mark came to UC Berkeley from the Netherlands' University of Utrecht, where he studied mathematics (1985-1990) and obtained his Ph.D. (1993). He completed his thesis, " Efficient and inefficient estimation in semiparametric models," under the guidance of Prof. Richard D. Gill.

In 1994, Mark was a Neyman Visiting Professor in the Statistics Department at UC Berkeley. Subsequently, he accepted a tenure track position in the Division of Biostatistics, School of Public Health at Berkeley, and became an Associate Professor in Biostatistics in July 1997. By July 2000, Mark was a Professor in Biostatistics and Statistics. Having taught introductory courses in Biostatistics for Public Health students, he currently teaches classes on censored data, survival analysis, causal inference, data adaptive loss-based estimation, and multiple testing. He has been Associate Editor for Biometrics(1997-2003) and Lifetime Data Models (1996-2000), and Vice-President of the Bay-Area Chapter of the American Statistical Association. He is currently Associate Editor for Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference, Statistical Applications in Genetics and Molecular Biology, and the Annals of Statistics, and is Director of the Biostatistics and Computing core of the Superfund Research Program of a Center on Genomics in Environmental Science in the School of Public Health, headed by Professor Martyn Smith. He is also founding editor of a new electronic International Journal in Biostatistics, which is led by Professor Nick Jewell.

Several grants have been awarded to Mark, including an NIH FIRST Award research grant for the period 1996-2001 to work on "Locally Efficient Estimation in Censored Data Models "; an NIAID grant for 1999-2002 to develop a unified methodology for censored data and causal inference; a 3 year grant he received in March 2001 from the Life Science Informatics Institute and its industrial partner, biotech company Chiron, to create statistical methods for data structures involving microarray data on complete (human) genomes; an NIH grant "Statistical Analysis of Longitudinal Studies with Gene Expression Data " (2002-2006); and an NIH grant "Data Adaptive Estimation in Epidemiology and Genomics " (2004-2007).

Mark received the 2004 Mortimer Spiegelman Award. The Mortimer Spiegelman Award was established in 1969 by his family and is awarded annually to a young statistician for outstanding contributions in health statistics. It is presented by the Statistics Section of the American Public Health Association (APHA).

Mark van der Laan received the van Dantzig Award on April 11, 2005. Once in every 5 years the Dutch Statistical Assocation presents the Van Dantzig Award, which is the most prestigious award in operation research and Statistics in the Netherlands. The award is in memory of prof. dr. D. van Dantzig, the founder of Dutch mathematical statistics. The Van Dantzig Award is presented to a dutch statistician or operation researcher who is not older than 40 years and who during the past 5 years has made an exceptional contribution --- either theoretical, or practical--- to the field. Previous recipients of the Van Dantzig Award are Van Zwet (1970), Van Meurs (1975), Hordijk (1980), Rinnooy Kan (1985), Gill (1990), and Ridder (1995), van der Vaart (2000).

Mark was selected to present the 2005 Lefkopoulou distinguished lectureship, Harvard University, Boston, September 15, 2005. This lectureship is an award from the Department of Biostatistics, Harvard University, Boston. The program was established in honor of the late Myrto Lefkopoulou, a faculty member and student in the Department of Biostatistics. The lectureship is awarded to a promising biostatistical scientist who has made contributions to collaborative or methodological research in the application of statistical methods to biology or medicine or to excellence in the teaching of biostatistics.

Professor van der Laan has been awarded the UC Berkeley Chancellor Endowed Chair 2005-2008, and the long-term Jiann-Ping Hsu/Karl E. Peace Endowed Chair in Biostatistics starting 2005.

Mark van der Laan has been selected to be featured on the cover of one of the five well-respected Tan Applied Mathematics series textbooks, edited by Applied Mathematics for Brooks/Cole, a division of Thomson Higher Education. Five applied mathematicians have been featured on the cover of each of the five texts in the hope that seeing a successful applied mathematician will motivate readers (students) of these texts to learn and to use the applied mathematical skills they acquire in their future careers.


Lecture:

lecture
flag Unified Loss Function and Estimating Function Based Learning
as author at  Workshop on Modelling in Classification and Statistical Learning, Eindhoven 2004,
3595 views