Applied Statistics Seminar on Tuesday, 10 January 2023 at 2 PM.

The speaker will be Argho Sarkar, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Maryland, USA. He will give a talk on "Deep Learning for Climate Change: Challenges, Progress, and Possibilities."  Besides presenting his research, Argho will also talk about his experiences as a graduate student at the University of Maryland. The seminar will take place in the

Applied Statistics Seminar on Tuesday (February 7, 2023) at 12 PM

Abstract: The exchangeability of units between treatment groups is a key and typically untestable assumption for evaluating causal intervention effects in observational studies. Standard methods assuming exchangeability can yield biased

Seminar on Classification and Clustering for RNA-seq data with variable selection 

Speaker: Tanbin Rahman PhD, FDA, USA Title: Classification and Clustering for RNA-seq data with variable selection Abstract: Clustering and classification play an important role in identifying sub-types of complex diseases as well as building a predictive model in the field of medicine. In recent years, lowering of cost and high accuracy has made RNA-seq widely popular which

Applied Statistics Seminar on “Pairwise Accelerated Failure Time Models for Infectious Disease Transmission Within and Between Households”

isrt seminar room

Abstract: Pairwise survival analysis handles dependent happenings in infectious disease transmission data by analyzing failure times in ordered pairs of individuals. The contact interval in the pair ij is the time from the onset of infectiousness in i to infectious contact from i to j, where an infectious contact is sufficient to infect j if he

Seminar on “Data Science Product Development In the (AWS) Cloud” at 2 pm on July 24, 2023

Speaker: Sheikh Samsuzzhan Alam, Senior Data Science Developer for Operation, Novartis Pharma, Czech Republic Venue: ISRT seminar room Date and time: 2 pm on Monday, 24 July 2023 Title: Data Science Product Development In the (AWS) Cloud Abstract: Customer-facing software products are complex in nature and usually developed by multiple teams of engineers. On the other hand, software products