I am Assistant Professor in Statistics at University College Dublin since September 2017 where I also served as Programme Director of the BSc and BA degrees in Statistics in 2018-2020.
I am Associate Editor for the Journal of Statistical Software and The R Journal since March 2021.
During my research activity I have been working closely with scientists with different expertise (e.g. social scientists, engineers, geographers, computer scientists, etc.) in order to yield important practical results as well as developments of new statistical techniques. An important part of my research activity is concerning the design of free software packages to make the research findings accessible to end users both in or outside academia.
I have been invited to present my work at several international conferences and seminars including as Keynote speaker at useR!2017 meeting - the most important international conference for users of the R statistical software.… read more
I am a PhD student in Statistics at Trinity College Dublin (TCD), working under the supervision of Dr. Jason Wyse in the School of Computer Science & Statistics.
My research focuses on sequential Bayesian inference for infectious disease modelling. I develop and apply particle filtering (Sequential Monte Carlo) methods for real-time estimation of transmission dynamics from epidemic data, with an emphasis on computationally efficient algorithms for state-space epidemic models.
My recent work includes developing sequential Monte Carlo squared methods for online inference in stochastic epidemic models and ensemble data assimilation approaches for sequential Bayesian inference.… read more
Neil Wright is a senior statistician in Oxford Population Health at the University of Oxford. His work focuses on applying statistical methods to large-scale population health research, with particular interests in cardiovascular epidemiology and the use of multi-omics data. He leads the planning and implementation of analyses for a range of observational and genetic studies in collaboration with other scientists. He also provides statistical support, develops code and resources, contributes to teaching, and supervises postgraduate taught and research students.… read more
Anne-Laure Boulesteix obtained a diploma in engineering from the Ecole Centrale Paris, a diploma in mathematics from the University of Stuttgart (2001) and a PhD in statistics (2005) from the Ludwig Maximilian University (LMU) of Munich. After a postdoc phase in medical statistics, she joined the Medical School of the University of Munich as a junior professor (2009) and professor (2012). She is working at the interface between biostatistics, machine learning and medicine with a particular focus on metascience and evaluation of methods. She is a steering committee member of the STRATOS initiative, founding member of the LMU Open Science Center and president of the German Region of the International Biometric Society.… read more
Maeve Upton is postdoctoral researcher specialising in statistical modelling, employing spatial temporal models with Bayesian frameworks. Her current research focuses on developing statistical models to accurately estimate real-time power generation capacity of renewable energy sources in Ireland. This work is conducted within the GREEN-GRID project, under the supervision of Dr. James Sweeney, and is supported by funding from the SFI. Maeve graduated from Trinity College Dublin in 2018 with a BSc in Physics and Astrophysics. In 2023, she completed my PhD in Maynooth University under the supervision of Prof Andrew Parnell and Dr Niamh Cahill. Her PhD project developed a series of statistical models to analyse historical sea level records using proxy data from salt marshes and Bayesian Hierarchical techniques.… read more