Gabrielle Kelly

Gabrielle Elizabeth Kelly is an Irish statistician. She is currently a senior lecturer of statistics at University College Dublin, and the former president of the Irish Statistical Association.

Her research has included studies of the correlation between birth and death dates,[1] and on correlations between student attendance at university lectures and the time of day of the lecture.[2]

Education and career

Kelly earned bachelor's and master's degrees at University College Cork,[3] and completed a Ph.D. in statistics at Stanford University in 1981. Her dissertation, The Influence Function in the Errors in Variables Problem, was supervised by Rupert G. Miller Jr.[4]

She became a lecturer at University College Cork after completing her doctorate, moved to the department of biostatistics at Columbia University in 1985, moved again to the University College & Middlesex School of Medicine in 1987, and took her present position as a senior lecturer at University College Dublin in 1990.[3]

Recognition and service

Kelly was the president of the Irish Statistical Association from 2016 to 2018.[5]

gollark: gollark is.
gollark: The only ethical way to fix that sort of issue is to just mandatorily give all sportspeople testosterone until they have equal amounts.
gollark: It's probably more for sports reasons.
gollark: You probably need all the RAM and support components. Don't desolder it.
gollark: Don't?

References

  1. Winter, George (17 January 2019), "The association between our dates of birth and death", Irish Times
  2. Kearins, Aoife (21 May 2019), "The Case for Abolishing 9am Lectures", University Times
  3. Gabrielle Kelly, University College Dublin, retrieved 2020-01-11
  4. Gabrielle Kelly at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  5. Past ISA Presidents, Irish Statistical Association, retrieved 2020-01-11
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.