Marloes Maathuis

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Marloes Henriette Maathuis (born 1978)[1] is a Dutch statistician known for her work on causal inference using graphical models, particularly in high-dimensional data from applications in biology and epidemiology. She is a professor of statistics at ETH Zurich in Switzerland.

Education and career

[edit]

Maathuis is originally from Groningen, the daughter of a physician. She studied applied mathematics at the Delft University of Technology, earning a bachelor's degree in 2001 and a master's degree in 2003.[2] Her master's program included travel to Ethiopia to study the lifetime risks of HIV-related deaths there.[3]

With the assistance of Delft University professor Piet Groeneboom, Maathuis traveled to the University of Washington to work with Jon A. Wellner and complete her master's thesis.[3] She stayed at the University of Washington for Ph.D. in statistics, completed in 2006, and then for an additional year as an acting assistant professor.[2] Her doctoral dissertation, Nonparametric Estimation for Current Status Data with Competing Risks, was jointly supervised by Groeneboom and Wellner.[4]

She joined ETH Zurich as an untenured assistant professor of applied mathematics in 2007. In 2013, following the creation of a professorship in statistics at ETH Zurich, she was named an associate professor of statistics, as an early replacement for a retiring professor. She was promoted to full professor in 2016.[3][2]

Recognition

[edit]

Maathuis is a Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics,[5] elected in 2017.[2] In 2020, with Daniel Dadush, she won the Van Dantzig Award of the Netherlands Society for Statistics and Operations Research (VVSOR), "the highest Dutch award in statistics and operations research".[6] She is the 2021 winner of the Ethel Newbold Prize of the Bernoulli Society.[7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Birth year from Library of Congress catalog entry, retrieved 2022-07-16
  2. ^ a b c d Curriculum vitae (PDF), retrieved 2022-07-16
  3. ^ a b c Garry, Anna (2019), Inspiring Conversations with Women Professors: The Many Routes to Career Success, Academic Press, pp. 49–55, ISBN 9780128125502
  4. ^ Marloes Maathuis at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  5. ^ Honored IMS Fellows, Institute of Mathematical Statistics, retrieved 2022-07-16
  6. ^ Marloes Maathuis: Van Dantzig Award, ETH Zurich, 18 March 2020, retrieved 2022-07-16
  7. ^ Marloes Maathius receives the 2021 Ethel Newbold Prize, University of Washington Department of Statistics, 26 July 2021, retrieved 2022-07-16
[edit]