Departmental Colloquia

Department of Statistics
Texas A&M University

The Department hosts a colloquium series featuring presentations of current research and special topics in statistics by leading researchers in the field. All are welcome to attend. Students registered for STAT 681 receive course credit for attending the regular talks.

Colloquium Schedule, Spring 2001
Date Time Room Speaker Topic
Thu, Feb 22 4-5pm BLOC 150 Donglin Zeng, Department of Statistics,
University of Michigan
Adjusting for Dependent Censoring by Using
High Dimensional Ausilary Information
Fri, Feb 23 4-5pm BLOC 153 Nancy Heckman, Department of Statistics,
University of British Columbia
Nonparametric Testing for a Monotone Hazard Function:
Making a Global Test Local
Mon, Feb 26 4-5pm BLOC 448 Fei Zou, Department of Statistics,
University of Wisconsin-Madison
On Empirical Likelihood for a Semiparametric Mixture Model,
With Application to Quantitavite Trait Loci Analysis
Thu, Mar 1 No seminar, faculty meeting
Thu, Mar 8 4-5pm BLOC 150 Eugene Hwang,
Division of Public Health Sciences
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
Consistent Functional Methods for Logistic
Regression with Errors in Covariates
Thu, Mar 15 Spring Break
Thu, Mar 22 No seminar
Thu, Mar 29 4-5pm BLOC 150 Ying Qing Chen, Division of Biostatistics,
School of Public Health,
University of California at Berkeley
On A General Class of Semiparametric Hazards Regression Models
Thu, Apr 5 4-5pm BLOC 150 Tony Sun, Department of Statistics
University of Missouri
Two Sample Comparison of Interval-Censored Failure Time Data
Thu, Apr 19 4-5pm BLOC 150 Charles Kooperberg, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center Logic Regression
Apr 23, 24, 25 Hartley Lectures, Peter Hall
Fri, May 4 4-5pm BLOC 448 Hans-Georg Meuller, Department of Statistics
University of California at Davis
Nonparametric Regression Models for Functional Data
Fri, May 4 4-5pm BLOC 448 Jane-Ling Wang, Department of Statistics
University of California at Davis
Proportional Hazards Regression Model With Unknown Link Function

Departmental Colloquia, Fall 2000


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