Phillip Kott
Phillip S. Kott (born 1952) is an American statistician. He has worked in the field of survey statistics since 1984, and is regarded as a leader in this field. His areas of expertise include survey sampling design, analysis of survey data, and calibration weighting, among other areas. He revolutionized sampling design and estimation strategies with the Agricultural Resource Management Survey, which uses survey information more efficiently. He has taught at George Mason University, and USDA Graduate School.[1] He is currently an Associate Editor for the Journal of Official Statistics and the scientific journal Survey Methodology.[2]
Phillip S. Kott | |
---|---|
Alma mater | Brown University State University of New York |
Scientific career | |
Fields | statistics |
Institutions | Research Triangle Institute |
Doctoral advisor | Ryuzo Sato |
Early professional years
Phillip Kott earned his BS in Mathematics from the State University of New York at Stony Brook in 1974. In 1975, Kott received his MA in Economics from Brown University. In 1978, Kott received his PhD in Mathematical Economics from Brown University at age 26. He was recruited as an economist by the Bureau of Labor Statistics in November 1978 and worked there until 1984 when he was hired by U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).[3] In 1987, Kott began working for the National Agricultural Statistics Service of USDA, where he remained until 2008; he briefly worked at the Census Bureau in 1990.
Current professional activities
At the time of his retirement in 2008, Kott was the chief research statistician at NASS. He continued to work part-time at NASS through December 2010. Since January 2009, Kott has been a senior research statistician at Research Triangle Institute (RTI).[4]
Notable achievements
In 1996, Dr. Kott was elected a Fellow of ASA. Kott has been an organizer of numerous conferences and sessions at national and international statistical organizations. He has also served as a representative to the Council of Chapters of ASA. He served as the president of the Washington Statistical Society from June 1996 to June 1997. In 1997, Kott was awarded the Distinguished Achievement Medal by American Statistical Association's Section on Statistics and the Environment. More recently, Kott received the Presidential Rank Award in 2007.[5]
In 2017, Kott earned the NISS Distinguished Service Award for his "extraordinary service that advances NISS and its mission".[6]
Select bibliography
Books edited
Kott is a co-editor of Business Survey Methods (1995), a collection of papers from diverse researches regarding the process of conducting statistical surveys.[7]
Papers published
Kott has written or calaborated on hundreds of papers advancing the science of survey methodology. The following are five of Kott's most influential and important published papers:[8]
- Kott, P., & Chang, T. (2010). Using calibration weighting to adjust for nonignorable unit nonresponse. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 105, 1265-1275.
- Kott, P., & Liu, Y. (2009). One-sided coverage intervals for a proportion estimated from a stratified simple random sample. International Statistical Review, 77, 251–265.
- Kott, P. (2006). Using calibration weighting to adjust for nonresponse and coverage errors. Survey Methodology, 133–142
- Kott, P. (2001). The delete-a-group jackknife. Journal of Official Statistics, 521–526.
- Kott, P., & Stukel, D. (1997). Can the jackknife be used with a two-phase sample? Survey Methodology, 81–89
References
- Kott, Phillip S. Personal interview. 18 Mar. 2011.
- https://projects.isr.umich.edu/jpsm/Materials/2008-0506.html
- Kott, Phillip. "Professional Activities." E-mail to Sam Kott. 9 Mar. 2011.
- http://www.rti.org/experts.cfm?objectid=A19D0D1F-5056-B155-2C90BB4502FEC9FA
- Kott, Phillip S. Personal interview. 28 Feb. 2011.
- https://www.niss.org/news/phillip-kott-receives-2017-niss-distinguished-service-award
- https://www.amazon.com/Business-Survey-Methods-Probability-Statistics/dp/0471598526
- Kott, Phillip. "Professional Activities." E-mail to Sam Kott. 9 Mar. 2011.