Janet Wittes
Janet Turk Wittes is an American statistician known for her work on clinical trials.
Education
Wittes is the daughter of a chemist and a psychologist. She began her studies at Radcliffe College in the biochemistry program, choosing it over chemistry because of its added opportunities for mentorship. Her faculty mentor, John Tileston Edsall, noting her preference for inference over experiment, guided her to aim for a career in statistics. Towards this goal, she switched her major to mathematics,[1] graduating in 1964.[2]
She stayed at Harvard University for her graduate studies in statistics. At Harvard, she was supported by a fellowship from the United States Public Health Service (chosen because its application form was short) and because of this ended up working in biostatistics.[1] She completed her Ph.D. in 1970;[2] her doctoral advisor was Theodore Colton.[1]
Career
While her husband, physician Robert E. Wittes,[3] served a term in the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, Wittes did part-time postdoctoral research with Jerome Cornfield at the National Cancer Institute. After an additional two years as a part-time instructor of epidemiology at Columbia University,[1] she became a regular-rank faculty member in the mathematics department at Hunter College in 1974 and remained there until 1982.[1][2]
In 1983 she moved to the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute as chief of the Biostatistics Research Branch, and remained there until 1988,[2] when she left because of a change of employment by her husband,[1] and became a biostatistician for the Department of Veterans Affairs in Connecticut from 1989 to 1990.[2] Returning soon afterwards to Washington, and unable to find a suitable government position, she founded her consulting firm, Statistics Collaborative, in 1990.[1] As of 2019 she remains president of the firm.[4]
Contributions and service
Wittes' research focuses on the design of clinical trials, and she has also published on mark and recapture methods.[2] With Michael A. Proschan and K. K. Gordon Lan, she is an author of the book Statistical Monitoring of Clinical Trials: A Unified Approach (Springer, 2006).[5]
Wittes was president of the Society for Clinical Trials for 2001. She was editor-in-chief of the society's journal Controlled Clinical Trials from 1994 to 1998.[2]
Recognition
Wittes was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 1989. She is also a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and of the Society for Clinical Trials, and an elected member of the International Statistical Institute[1]
She was the winner of the 2006 Janet L. Norwood Award For Outstanding Achievement By A Woman In The Statistical Sciences.[2] In 2015 the American Statistical Association gave her their W. J. Dixon Award for Excellence in Statistical Consulting "for exceptional contributions to advancing the science and art of statistical consulting and collaboration; for developing innovative, widely used, statistical methodology; for major worldwide accomplishments, especially in the area of clinical trials, including performing creative, easily interpretable interim analyses and serving on numerous data and safety monitoring boards; for extraordinary leadership as president of Statistics Collaborative; and for being a true beacon for integrity."[6]
References
- Evans, Scott (2014), "An Interview with Janet Wittes, President of Statistics Collaborative", Chance, American Statistical Association, 27 (4): 15–22, doi:10.1080/09332480.2014.988949
- Fifth Annual Janet L. Norwood Award For Outstanding Achievement By A Woman In The Statistical Sciences, Recipient: Janet Turk Wittes, Ph.D., University of Alabama School of Public Health, archived from the original on 2014-10-11, retrieved 2019-01-24. See also the associated brief biography.
- "Miss Janet Turk to Be Wed In June to Robert E. Wittes", The New York Times, February 13, 1964
- Janet Wittes, Ph.D., president, Statistics Collaborative, retrieved 2019-01-23
- Reviews of Statistical Monitoring of Clinical Trials: A Unified Approach:
- Chernick, Michael R. (May 2007), Technometrics, 49 (2): 223–224, doi:10.1198/tech.2007.s479, JSTOR 25471319CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
- Dmitrienko, Alex (August 2007), Statistics in Medicine, 26 (20): 3822–3824, doi:10.1002/sim.2920CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
- Hu, X. Joan (September 2007), Biometrics, 63 (3): 969, doi:10.1111/j.1541-0420.2007.00856_3.x, JSTOR 4541435CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
- Wassmer, Gernot (November 2007), Journal of Biopharmaceutical Statistics, 17 (6): 1239–1242, doi:10.1080/10543400701645629CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
- Chattopadhyay, Somesh; Hammerstrom, Thomas (March 2008), Journal of the American Statistical Association, 103 (481): 430–431, doi:10.1198/jasa.2008.s222, JSTOR 27640060CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
- W. J. Dixon Award for Excellence in Statistical Consulting; 2015 W.J. Dixon Award Winner: Janet Wittes, Statistics Collaborative, Inc., American Statistical Association, archived from the original on 2016-03-30