Erica Moodie

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Erica Eleanor Margret Moodie is a Canadian biostatistician known for her work on dynamic treatment regimes. She is Canada Research Chair and Professor in the Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health at McGill University.[1]

Education and career[edit]

Moodie graduated from the University of Winnipeg in 2000 with a double major in mathematics and statistics. She earned a master's degree in epidemiology at the University of Cambridge in 2001, a second master's degree in biostatistics at the University of Washington in 2004, and a Ph.D. in biostatistics at the University of Washington in 2006. Her dissertation was Inference for optimal dynamic treatment regimes,[2] and was supervised by Thomas Richardson.[1]

She has been on the McGill University faculty since 2006.[2]

Books[edit]

With B. Chakraborty, Moodie is the coauthor of the book Statistical Methods for Dynamic Treatment Regimes: Reinforcement Learning, Causal Inference, and Personalized Medicine (Springer, 2013).[3] She is the co-editor, with M. R. Kosorok, of Adaptive Treatment Strategies in Practice: Planning Trials and Analyzing Data for Personalized Medicine (SIAM, 2016).

Recognition[edit]

Moodie became an Elected Member of the International Statistical Institute in 2015.[2] She was the 2020 winner of the CRM-SSC Prize in Statistics "for her outstanding contributions to biostatistics, notably in causal inference, precision medicine, and dynamic treatment regimes, and her influential contributions to substantive areas of application such as HIV and mental health".[1]

Family[edit]

Moodie is originally from Winnipeg, Manitoba; her parents, Ric Moodie and Patricia F. Moodie, are a zoologist and biostatistician respectively,[1][4] and her older sister Zoe Moodie, brother-in-law Jonathan Wakefield, and husband David A. Stephens are all also (bio)statisticians.[4][5]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Erica Moodie, CRM-SSC Prize in Statistics 2020, Statistical Society of Canada, retrieved 2020-07-02
  2. ^ a b c Curriculum vitae (PDF), 31 March 2020, retrieved 2020-07-02
  3. ^ An, Hyonggin (September 2015), "Review of Statistical Methods for Dynamic Treatment Regimes", Journal of Agricultural, Biological, and Environmental Statistics, 20 (3): 433–434, doi:10.1007/s13253-015-0204-7, JSTOR 26451843, S2CID 123717906
  4. ^ a b Moodie, Ric, Something about Ric Moodie, retrieved 2020-07-02
  5. ^ Sisters Erica and Zoe Moodie use biostatistics to improve the world of medicine, University of Winnipeg, 23 November 2018, retrieved 2020-07-02

External links[edit]