Biostatistics Seminar Series Spring 2008
Time: Friday, 12:30–1:30 pm (unless otherwise noted)
Place: GEMS classroom on the 3rd floor in the
Shriner's Building
- January 18
- Brian Gage,
Division of General Medical Sciences,
Washington University in St Louis
- Study
Design Strategies to Evaluate Pharmacogenetic Testing and
www.WarfarinDosing.org
- February 1
- Marco Ferreira,
Department of Statistics, University of Missouri - Columbia
- Spatio-temporal Models for Areal Data
in the Exponential Family
- February 6 (Please note this is Wednesday)
- Zhi Wei,
Genomics and Computational Biology,
University of Pennsylvania
- Statistical
Methods for Network-Based Analysis of Genomic Data
- February 15
- Na Li,
Department of Biostatistics, University of Minnesota
- Analysis
of Clustered Binary Outcomes Measured with Uncertainty
- February 22
- T.
Charles Casper,
Department of Statistics, University of Wisconsin
- Survival Estimation for a Composite Outcome
When Ascertainment of Events Is Delayed
- February 29
- Anne Kwitek,Department of Internal Medicine, University of Iowa
- Genetics of Complex Disease:
Tying Genotype and Phenotype across Species
- March 11
- Jurgen Symanzik,
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Utah State University
- Statistical Graphics and
Visual Data Mining for Biostatistical Research
- March 14
-
- No seminar (Spring break)
- March 28
-
Nicholas Schork,
Scripps Genomic Medicine,
Scripps Health & Department of Molecular and Experimental Medicine,
The Scripps Research Institute
- Multilocus Analysis in Genetic Studies
- April 11
- Aldi Kraja,
Division of Statistical Genomics,
Washington University in St Louis
- A perspective on the Statistical Methods
to Identify Loss of
Heterozygosity in Matched Samples of Normal and Lung Tumor Tissues
and LOH Gene Networks
-
- April 18
- Kai Yu,
Biometry and Mathematical Statistics Branch,
National Institute of Health
- Population Substructure and
Control Selection in Genome-wide Association Studies
- April 25
- Eric Schadt,
Rosetta Inpharmatics/Merck Research Labs, Seattle
- Constructing Tissue-Tissue Networks
to Highlight Novel Causal
Patterns of Association with Core Disease Processes
For more information, send an email to
yunju at wubios dot wustl dot edu (or rosy at wubios dot wustl dot edu)
Last updated: Friday, April 11, 2008