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UID:MEC-8cfef17bee2b7a75a3ce09d40b497f6b@canssiontario.utoronto.ca
DTSTART:20211129T203000Z
DTEND:20211129T213000Z
DTSTAMP:20210310T184900Z
CREATED:20210310
LAST-MODIFIED:20211122
SUMMARY:Data Science ARES: Krista Gile
DESCRIPTION:\n\n\n\n\nJoin us at the Data Science Applied Research and Education Seminar (ARES) with:\n\n\n\nDr. Krista J. Gile, ProfessorDepartment of Mathematics and StatisticsUniversity of Massachusetts, Amherst\n\n\n\nFree Event | Registration Required\n\n\n\nTalk Title: Policy Questions, Messy Data: Three approaches to turning messy data into information for public policy\n\n\n\nAbstract:\n\n\n\nThis talk describes 3 projects demonstrating the development of statistical methods to use messy data on people to draw conclusions for public health or policy.  It concludes with some comments on the contribution of statistics to such settings.\n\n\n\nFor the first part consider:  How do you sample populations such as people who inject drugs?  You find a few, then get them to recruit their friends.  But how do you make inference from the resulting sample?   Respondent-Driven Sampling attempts to allow for statistical inference in this challenging data setting.  In particular, we address the question of how to cluster the network tree-structured data collected using RDS based on covariates and partial network observation.\n\n\n\nIn the second part, we address the challenge of estimating the number of killings in the Syrian conflict.  The challenge would be easy if there were a list of killings, and several groups are working on creating such lists.  Unfortunately, none of the lists are complete.  We introduce a method to use hierarchical clustering to characterize the partial overlap between 4 separately-collected lists of killings to estimate the total killings.  This is an extension of the classical capture-recapture or multiple systems estimation methods.\n\n\n\nFinally, we discuss a difficult issue in analysis of network data:  In many cases, networks are undirected (if I had lunch with you, you also had lunch with me), but two parties reporting on the same relation may give conflicting reports.  We address this problem in the context of a longitudinal study of (several types of) social relations and health behaviors among middle school students.  Leveraging the multiple networks observed for each student, we estimate the false reporting rates of each student to infer the true network structure. \n\n\n\nSpeaker Profile:\n\n\n\nAfter earning degrees in engineering and social science, and work in social services research, Krista Gile earned her PhD in Statistics from the University of Washington in 2008.  She completed a Postdoctoral Fellowship at Nuffield College, University of Oxford, then joined the statistics faculty at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. \n\n\n\nMost of her research is inspired by the information needs of social science and health policy research. Because these projects are substantively driven, the data are often messy and therefore not conducive to standard statistical methods. She especially enjoys studying technical details alongside their practical implications. Much of her work has focused on methods for making inference from sparse data on hard-to-reach human populations, with social or health policy implications. \n\n\n\nHer work is enriched by collaborations with students, academic researchers inside and outside statistics, and collaborators in agencies including the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Health Organization, UNAIDS, and the Human Rights Data Analysis Group.\n
URL:https://canssiontario.utoronto.ca/event/ares_krista_gile/
ORGANIZER;CN=Esther Berzunza:MAILTO:esther.berzunza@utoronto.ca
CATEGORIES:Applied Research and Education Seminar​
LOCATION:Zoom (Online)
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://canssiontario.utoronto.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Gile-Krista3x2.png
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