Steven Lalley
Steven Paul Lalley (born 16 January 1954) is an American statistician and mathematician.[1]
Lalley graduated in 1976 with B.S. from Michigan State University.[2] He received in 1981 his Ph.D. from Stanford University with thesis Repeated Likelihood Ratio Tests for Curved Exponential Families under the supervision of David Siegmund.[3] After teaching at Columbia University and Purdue University, Lalley became in 1998 a professor of statistics at the University of Chicago and served as department chair from 2001 to 2005.[4]
He was an associate editor for the Annals of Statistics from 1988 to 1991. For the Annals of Probability he was an associate editor from 1991 to 1996[2] and editor-in-chief from 2003 to 2005.[5]
In 2012 Lalley was elected a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[6] In 2006 he was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Madrid.[7]
References
[edit]- ^ "Steven Lalley, Professor, Department of Statistics". University of Chicago. (with list of articles and links to online preprints)
- ^ a b "Steven P. Lalley (Ten nominees for IMS Council 2010–2013)" (PDF). IMS Bulletin. 34 (4): 6. May 2010.
- ^ Steven Paul Lalley at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ^ "Steven Lalley, Professor of Statistics and Mathematics". Stevanovich Center for Financial Mathematics at the University of Chicago.
- ^ "Past Editors, Annals of Probability". Institute from Mathematical Statistics.
- ^ "First class of American Mathematical Society fellows includes 20 from UChicago". news.uchicago.edu. 15 November 2012.
- ^ Lalley, Steven P. (2006). "The weak/strong survival transition on trees and nonamenable graphs" (PDF). International Congress of Mathematicians. Vol. 3. pp. 637–647.
- 1954 births
- Living people
- 20th-century American mathematicians
- 21st-century American mathematicians
- Probability theorists
- Michigan State University alumni
- Stanford University alumni
- Purdue University faculty
- University of Chicago faculty
- Fellows of the American Mathematical Society
- Fellows of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics
- Voting theorists
- American mathematical statisticians