British statistician and geneticist
Matthew Stephens FRS (born 1970) is a Bayesian statistician and professor in the departments of human genetics and statistics at the University of Chicago . He is known for the Li and Stephens model as an efficient coalescent.
Education
Stephens has a PhD from Magdalen College, Oxford University where his advisor was Brian D. Ripley .[ 1] He then went on to work with Peter Donnelly as a postdoctoral researcher.
Career
Stephens conducted postdoctoral research with Peter Donnelly at the University of Oxford. It was there that he developed the Structure computer program, along with Jonathan Pritchard , which is used for determining population structure and estimating individual admixture .[ 2] He then went on to develop the influential Li and Stephens model as an efficient model for linkage disequilibrium .[ 3]
Awards
Stephens was awarded the Guy Medal (bronze) in 2006.[ 4] He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2023.[ 5]
Notes