October 30, 2009

SAS Hall – Honor Award at 2009 Institute of Architecture

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SAS Hall, the new home for the NC State University Mathematics and Statistics departments, received an Honor Award at the 2009 American Institute of Architecture South Atlantic Region conference held in Greenville, SC. Twenty projects were selected from over 200 entries submitted by AIA South Atlantic Region members. The South Atlantic Region includes North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia. Park Shops also received an Honor Award. The architectural firm PBC+L (Pearce, Brinkley, Cease and Lee) received a total of three Honor awards, the most of any firm in the region. Pictures and a news announcement can be found at http://www.pbclarchitecture.com/

May 5, 2009

NC State Dedicates New Mathematics and Statistics Building

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SAS  Building

North Carolina State University formally dedicated its new mathematics and
statistics building on Friday, May 1. At a dedication celebration attended by more than
200 faculty, students, friends and alumni, NC State Chancellor James L. Oblinger
announced for the first time that the building will be named SAS Hall, in honor of the
founders of the Cary, North Carolina-based software company.

The 119,000 square-foot building will house state-of-the-art classrooms, computer labs, tutorial centers and meeting and study space for students and faculty from NC State’s mathematics and statistics departments. A partnership with Cisco will improve digital communications for students by providing access to live and on-demand video content from anywhere on campus.

Construction of the $32-million building was made possible by the Higher
Education Bond Referendum passed by North Carolinians in 2000, as well as by gifts
from private donors, including a substantial contribution from SAS. SAS was born out of a research project that began in the NC State Department of Statistics in the early 1970s. Since then, the company has grown into one of the largest software providers in the world. Two of the company’s founders, CEO Jim Goodnight and Executive Vice President John Sall, as well as their spouses remain close partners and staunch supporters of the department and the university.

“At SAS, we believe that it is vital for students in the mathematical and statistical
sciences to learn in an environment that provides state-of-the-art facilities and
instructional technologies,” Sall said. “It’s also critical that they participate in the kind of collaborative initiatives they’ll experience in the work place. That type of environment produces the type of employee and person we want at SAS, and it’s the type we want to produce at NC State. That’s why we decided to make a significant contribution toward ensuring that this building would become a reality.”

“The technology resources in this building will indeed have a very positive impact
on teaching, learning, consulting, and research in our departments,” said Sastry Pantula, the Head of the Department of Statistics at NC State. “I must say, so will the physical layout of the spaces within this beautiful building. A lot of thought has gone into the overall sense of community, and collaboration we wanted these spaces to convey. Our departments take great pride in mentoring, and vertically integrating research and education! Teaching and discovery don’t happen exclusively in the classrooms, or behind a closed office door. These happen in informal chats between a professor and his/her students over a brown bag lunch. They happen when colleagues strike up a conversation about the day’s events over a cup of coffee in the commons. It happens late at nights when undergraduate and graduate students play together in our computer labs- our modern incubators. It happens when our retired faculty, successful alumni, and friends visit us frequently to share their wealth of experiences. We are very grateful to the donors for their support and for their vision, to the taxpayers of North Carolina, to Dean Solomon, and to every single person involved with this masterpiece, from the conception to completion.”

NC State boasts a longstanding tradition of excellence in teaching and research in
statistics. Its Department of Statistics is among the nation’s oldest and most prestigious, having been founded by renowned statistician Gertrude Cox in 1941. The university currently ranks fifth nationally in total R&D expenditures and in competitive federal R&D expenditures in the mathematical and statistical sciences. It also received the Departmental Teaching and Learning Excellence Award at NC State a few years ago.

“NC State’s mathematical and statistical science programs rank among the best in
the nation,” said Daniel Solomon, dean of the university’s College of Physical and
Mathematical Sciences. “We now have a state-of-the-art facility that is worthy of the
stature of our students and faculty.”

April 15, 2009

University Diversity Awards

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diversity

Congratulations to Jackie Hughes-Oliver and Anthony Franklin who were recognized today at the University Diversity Awards reception. Dr. Hughes-Oliver was nominated in the faculty category for her long history of supporting a diverse and inclusive campus and department environment. Anthony Franklin was nominated and won! in the student category for his support of current students and in recruiting new students of all backgrounds.

Thanks to Jackie and Anthony for all they do for the department and the university!

November 10, 2008

Alumni Awards Celebration 2008

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Sastry Pantula, Nancy Ridenhour, Pam Arroway

Sastry Pantula, Nancy Ridenhour, Pam Arroway

On November 6, 2008, PAMS held an Alumni Awards Celebration to present three awards. Nancy Ridenhour received the Zenith Medal for Service, which recognizes alumni or friends of the College for distinguished contributions or advocacy that significantly advance our ability to make powerful impacts on science, the economy, the environment and the quality of the human condition. Nancy received bachelor’s degree in statistics from our department in 1976 and went to work for what was then Cannon Mills. She spent the next 17 years in the textile, financial and computer consulting industries before going into business for herself in 1993 as an independent business technology analyst. Since then, she has provided expert advice and computer solutions to the likes of Bank of America, Wachovia and Duke Energy. An active leader in her field, Nancy is a member of the Independent Computer Consultants Association and has served on that organization’s national board. She chaired the Charlotte North Special Interest Group for the Charlotte Chapter of the National Association of Women Business Owners for more than three years. She serves as publicity chair for the Southeast Inter-Relational Database Users Group and is a member of the Lake Norman Chamber and North Carolina Technology Association. She has served on the board of the NC State Alumni Association and served three terms on the board of the NCSU Physical and Mathematical Sciences Foundation.

Congratulations Nancy!

At this event, Dr. Jim Goodnight of SAS also announced establishing a Leroy Martin Distinguished Professorship in Mathematics. Dr. Martin received the Distinguished Alumni Award from PAMS this year. Suzanne Gordon, another distinguished alum of our department from SAS, also attended the dinner.

June 16, 2008

Best Student Presentation – Amy Nail

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At the 19th Annual Conference of The International Environmetrics Sociey, Amy Nail won the award for Best Student Presentation for work completed as a student. She presented her dissertation research: Quantifying local creation and regional transport using a hierarchical space-time model of ozone as a function of observed NOx, a latent space-time VOC process, emissions, and meteorology.

March 26, 2008

NC State Alumni and Faculty are candidates in upcoming ASA Elections!

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ASA election opens on Monday, March 17 and closes on May 15, 2008.
Be Green- Use the electronic ballots!

Here is a list of NC State graduates and faculty (and the other) candidates for various offices.

President-Elect: Sastry G. Pantula and Xiaoli Meng

Statistical Consulting- Council of Sections Representative:
Dennis Eggett and Marlene Egger
Statistical Computing- Council of Sections Representative:
Montserrat Fuentes and Guy Lebanon
Statistics and the Environment- Council of Sections Representative:
Jarrett Barber and Alix Gitelman
Statistics in Epidemiology- Program Chair-Elect:
Heejung Bang and Ruth Pfeiffer
Statistics in Defense and National Security- Publications Officer
Michael Porter and Sinjini Mitra
Survey Research Methods- Treasurer:
Dawn Haines and John Finamore

The statements of the President-elect candidates, and the bios of all candidates can be found at:
http://www.amstat.org/candidatebios/index.cfm?fuseaction=ViewBios

December 10, 2007

Professor Rebecca W. Doerge Elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science

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Rebecca W. Doerge, Professor of Statistics and Agronomy, was elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in October 2007. She, along with 470 other elected Fellows, will be recognized for her contributions to science and technology at the Fellows Forum to be held on February 16, 2008 during the AAAS Annual Meeting in Boston. She is one of six elected Fellows this year in the Section on Statistics. Other current Department of Statistics faculty members who have received this honor include Professor and Department Head Mary Ellen Bock, Professor William S. Cleveland, and Professor Herman Rubin.

Doerge received her Ph.D. in Statistics from North Carolina State University in 1993. She joined the Department of Statistics in 1995 after a two year postdoctoral fellowship at Cornell University. Doerge has played an integral role in the establishment of Genomics at Purdue University, and as director of the Statistical Bioinformatics Center at Purdue, she continues to forge new ground in the exciting areas of statistical genomics, quantitative genetics, and bioinformatics. Although her formal training is in Mathematics and Statistics, her research lies on the interdisciplinary boundaries of many fields (Animal Science, Biology, Biochemistry, Botany, Chemistry, Computer Science, Horticulture, Genetics, Genomics, Plant Breeding, etc.) that are currently involved in assessing genomic based questions. Statistical genomics, also referred to as Statistical Bioinformatics, a component of bioinformatics, brings together all of these scientific disciplines into one arena to ask, answer, and disseminate biologically interesting questions and information in the quest to understand the ultimate function of DNA and epigenomic associations for each and every genome. Currently, Doerge’s research program encompasses four broad areas: development of statistical methodology for genetic mapping and quantitative trait loci (QTL) location; applying up to date genetic mapping and (e-)QTL methodology to real experimental data; assessing genetic variation and diversity of populations and germplasm collections; and understanding and analyzing gene expression, protein expression, and epigenomic data for the purpose of statistically designing and then testing (epi-)genomic/biologically based questions. Doerge has won numerous awards for both teaching and research including: Purdue’s Teaching for Tomorrow Award (1996); College of Science Outstanding Assistant Professor for Excellence in Teaching and Research (1997); Outstanding Teacher of Undergraduates in the School of Science (1998); University Scholar (2001); and the College of Science Graduate Student Mentoring Award (2007). She was elected Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 2007.

November 9, 2007

Distinguished Alumnus Award 2007

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Jun Zhu (PhD Statistics and Genetics 1989) received the Distinguished Alumnus Award from the College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences on November 8, 2007 at North Carolina State University. This award recognizes alumni whose exceptional achievements in business,education, research or public service have brought honor and distinction to the College and University.

After earning his Ph.D. in 1989 and completing his postdoctoral work in the Department of Statistics at NC State, he returned to China, where he became an associate professor in the Agronomy Department at Zhejiang Agricultural University. He served as Dean of Zhejiang’s College of Agricultural and Biotechnology from 1999 until 2005, when he was named Vice President of Zhejiang University. He is also the Director of the Institute of Bioinformatics since 2001. He has extensively published in statistical genetics area, and has developed software for quantitative genetics and bioinformatics.

October 24, 2007

Brian Eastwood – Quality Advocate Award 2006

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Brian Eastwood, Ph.D. (LCC-global discovery and development statistics), received a doctorate in statistics from North Carolina State University. Since joining Lilly as a research scientist in 1998, Eastwood has focused on statistical methods for drug discovery in neuroscience and obesity projects. He has supported numerous teams in assay validation, statistical design issues, and data interpretation. Most prominent has been Brian’s work on the development and validation of the rat chronic obesity model used by many obesity projects to support candidate selection. Eastwood was co-lead developer of the good research practices In Vivo Biology Research course. For this work, he received a Quality Advocate Award in 2006. Eastwood is lead author in the validation and operations chapters of the Quantitative Biology Handbook. He is a departmental expert on assay validation standards, variance component analysis, repeated measures analysis, and histological sampling methods.

January 29, 2007

Medal of Achievment by PAMS College for 1990 Ph.D. Graduate

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Ji Zhang was recently awarded the Medal of Achievement by the College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences at North Carolina State University.

This award recognizes alumni of the college who have excelled through their chosen professions or public service, and proven themselves destined to make a significant impact in science, government, education, business or industry.

Ji received his bachelors in mathematics and his masters in mathematics and probability from Peking University in Beijing, China, in 1982 and 1985. He came to NC State to work on his Ph.D. in statistics in 1986.

After receiving his doctorate in 1990, Ji spent 13 years as a biometrician and senior director of biostatistics at Merck Research Laboratories. While there, he managed the statistical support for the successful development, filing and marketing of several compounds.

Ji left Merck in 2003 to join the world’s third largest pharmaceutical company. As vice president of biostatistics at France-based Sanofi-Synthelabo Research, he was responsible for world-wide biostatistical and programming support for discovery, preclinical and clinical research. These clinical projects included development of compounds for the oncology, cardiovascular, thrombosis, psychiatry, metabolism, respiratory, neurology and internal medicine areas. His title changed to vice president of biostatistics and programming in 2004 when the company became sanofi-aventis.

Most recently, he was promoted to vice president of international clinical operations and international development, which includes responsibility for about 3,000 researchers and support personnel in R&D centers in 28 countries, and clinical operational activities in many more. This division crafts clinical development strategies and study protocols, implements clinical studies globally, monitors patients in the trials, and collects and analyzes data in support of new drug applications worldwide.

Ji began publishing early in his career and as of November 2006, he had published 19 papers on statistical, epidemiological methods and applications, 20 papers on medical and clinical research, and another 34 reports, abstracts and other pieces. He’s also given numerous presentations at professional meetings and conferences. The most common topics of his work are related to clinical trial development related to asthma research.

Ji has served his field as referee of several journals, some for many years. He has spoken at numerous conferences and meetings, and has served as chair or organizer for invited sessions. He is a member of several societies, such as the American Statistical Association and Biometric Society, and has contributed his time and talents to many committees within those organizations.

“We’re very proud of Ji, we’re excited about his latest achievement, and we expect even greater things from him in the future,” said Daniel L. Solomon, dean of the college.