Rebecca Betensky
Rebecca A. Betensky is a professor of biostatistics in the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, where she directs the biostatistics program for the Harvard Clinical and Translational Science Center. She is also a biostatistician for Massachusetts General Hospital, where she directs the biostatistics core of the Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center.[1]
Education and career
Betensky studied mathematics as an undergraduate in Harvard College, graduating in 1987. She completed a doctorate in statistics at Stanford University in 1992.[1] Her dissertation, supervised by David Siegmund, was A Study of Sequential Procedures for Comparing Three Treatments.[2][3]
After postdoctoral studies at Stanford, she joined the faculty of Northwestern University in 1993.[1] She returned to Harvard as a faculty member in 1994, recruited as part of a large National Institutes of Health-funded contract for Harvard to perform statistics for the AIDS Clinical Trials Group.[1][4] She became associated with Mass General in 2007.[1]
Awards and honors
Betensky has been a fellow of the American Statistical Association since 2003, and an elected member of the International Statistical Institute since 2007. She won the Mortimer Spiegelman Award of the American Public Health Association in 2005.[1]
References
- Curriculum vitae (PDF), retrieved 2017-10-19
- Rebecca Betensky, Stanford Department of Statistics, retrieved 2017-10-19
- Rebecca Betensky at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- Laird, Nan; Zelen, Marvin (2012), "Harvard University Department of Biostatistics", in Agresti, Alan; Meng, Xiao-Li (eds.), Strength in Numbers: The Rising of Academic Statistics Departments in the U. S., Springer, pp. 77–90, doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-3649-2_7, ISBN 9781461436492. See especially pp. 84–85.