| NZSA Online Newsletter Awards Page | |
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New Zealand Statistical Association Newsletter 67 |
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March 2008 |
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| Edward Kidson Medal - Xiaogu Zheng
Dr Zheng obtained his PhD in Statistics at the Department of Mathematics, Beijing Normal University in 1985. From 1987 to 1990 he was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute of Statistics and Operations Research, Victoria University, supervised by David Vere-Jones and Peter Thomson, before joining the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research in Wellington as a Climate Statistician. Citation: It is with great pleasure that the Meteorological Society
of New Zealand has chosen to award its third Kidson Medal to Dr Xiaogu
Zheng of the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research. The
Society considers Dr Zheng’s work in studying patterns for seasonal
forecasting of rainfall in New Zealand to be outstanding in regards to
the advancement in science that this work provides. In terms of advancing
knowledge and capability on climate forecasting, Dr Zheng’s work
will soon be relevant not only to New Zealand but to most regions in the
Southern Hemisphere. It has provided remarkable mathematical rigour to
the complex world of integrating different components of the climate system.
Fellowship of RSNZ - Chris Wild
One strand of his work is concerned with developing methodology for the design and analysis of medical studies. The methods in his landmark paper “Fitting prospective models to case-control data” (the lead paper in the 1991 issue of Biometrika) have been further developed to enable researchers to use a whole range of new study designs. His current work draws on his combined expertise in response-based sampling and in frailty modeling, to produce efficient methods for handling data from retrospective family studies that are used widely in genetic epidemiology. A second strand is his work on nonstandard regression methodology, a subject on which his encyclopaedic book "Nonlinear Regression" with George Seber is the authoritative reference. A third strand of his work with broad international recognition is his research into the philosophy of statistics and modes of statistical thinking. The respect that he commands worldwide is illustrated by his being invited
as Opening Plenary Speaker at the 2004 conference of the Royal Statistical
Society, and the ten invited addresses he has given at meetings of the
International Statistical Institute and the American Statistical Association.
This
award was initiated in 1999 to promote statistics within NZ and to recognise
an individual’s contribution to the promotion and development of statistics.
The first recipient was Stan Roberts. Stan will be remembered most recently
for his efforts in the NZ statistics history project. The award was given
to him at the conference in Wellington in 1999. The second recipient was
Murray Jorgenson and the award was given to him at the conference in Christchurch
in 2001. Then Harold Henderson received the third award in 2003, and
Jeff Hunter the fourth award in 2006..
The criteria for the award are:
One point worth noting is that the award may only be given to fully paid up members of the NZSA. All membership categories are eligible. This could be a way of encouraging new members - promise new members that they may one day be given an award! Please send your nominations to Jennifer Brown (J.Brown@math.canterbury.ac.nz) or Harold Henderson (Harold.Henderson@agresearch.co.nz) Jennifer Brown
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