Zhiguo Li, PhD

Dr. Li received his PhD from the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor in 2008. He is Assistant Professor of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics at Duke University School of Medicine. Dr. Li's current research interests include survival analysis, dynamic treatment regimes, and clinical trials.

Sin-Ho Jung, PhD

Dr. Jung received his PhD from the University of Wisconsin at Madison in 1992. He is Professor of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics at Duke University School of Medicine. Dr. Jung's current research interests include design of clinical trials, survival analysis, longitudinal data analysis, clustered data analysis, ROC curve analysis, and design and analysis of microarray studies.

Joseph G. Ibrahim, PhD

Dr. Ibrahim is Alumni Distinguished Professor of Biostatistics, Professor of Statistics and Operations Research, and Member of the Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Dr. Ibrahim's areas of research focus are Bayesian inference, missing data problems, clinical trials, and cancer genomics, and is Project Director/Principal Investigator of two NIH grants for developing statistical methodology related to cancer and genomics research. Dr.

Jung-Ying Tzeng, PhD

Dr. Tzeng received her Ph.D. in Statistics from Carnegie Mellon University in 2003. She is Professor of the Department of Statistics and Bioinformatics Research Center at North Carolina State University. Dr. Tzeng's current research interests combine the fields of statistics and genetics and focus on developing statistical methods that can facilitate genetic epidemiologic research on human complex diseases.

Len Stefanski, PhD

Professor Stefanski earned a BS degree in Mathematics and Statistics at the University of Connecticut (1979), and MS and PhD degrees in Statistics at The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (1983, 1984). He started his academic career at Cornell University but has been a member of the Department of Statistics faculty at North Carolina State University since 1986. While at NCSU Stefanski has served as Director of the Statistics Graduate Program and as Associate Department Head, and has been awarded the D.D. Mason Department Award (2005) and the Cavell Brownie Mentoring Award (2013).

Rui Song, PhD

Dr. Song received her PhD in Statistics from the University of Wisconsin in 2006. She is Associate Professor of Statistics at North Carolina State University. Dr. Song's current research interests include high dimensional statistical learning, semiparametric inference and application of empirical processes, and dynamic treatment regimens.

Wenbin Lu, PhD

Dr. Lu received his Ph.D. from the Department of Statistics at Columbia University in 2003. He is Associate Professor of Statistics at North Carolina State University. Dr. Lu's current research interests include survival analysis, longitudinal data analysis, and statistical genetics.

Eric Laber, PhD

Eric Laber received his PhD in Statistics from the University of Michigan in 2011 and subsequently joined the Statistics Department at North Carolina State University. His research focuses on using randomized or observational data to inform complex decision problems in healthcare and ecology.

Marie Davidian, PhD

Dr. Davidian is William Neal Reynolds Professor of Statistics and Coordinator for the Chancellor's Faculty Excellence Program's Personalized Medicine Discovery Faculty Cluster at North Carolina State University, and is Adjunct Professor of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics at Duke.

Shannon Holloway, PhD

Dr. Holloway is trained as a theoretical physicist, having received her Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2004. She served as a Post-doctoral Research Associate and a Staff Scientist in the Theoretical Division of Los Alamos National Laboratory. Throughout her education and career, Dr. Holloway’s research interests focused on developing and implementing sophisticated numerical models of complex fundamental processes.