Evolutionary biologist and statistical geneticist
Cécile Ané is an evolutionary biologist , botanist , and statistical geneticist whose research involves the inference of evolutionary trees and the evolution of inherited traits, especially for plant species, as well as the mathematical statistics underlying these methods.[ 1] [ 2] Educated in France , she works in the United States as a professor at the University of Wisconsin–Madison , with joint appointments in the departments of botany and statistics .[ 1]
Education
Ané is a graduate of the École normale supérieure de Lyon .[ 3] She completed her Ph.D. in mathematics in 2000, at Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier University . Her dissertation, Grandes déviations et inégalités fonctionnelles pour des processus de Markov a temps continu sur un graphe [Large deviations and functional inequalities for continuous-time Markov processes on a graph ] concerned probability theory , and was directed by Michel Ledoux .[ 1] [ 4] [ 5]
Research
After completing a doctorate in mathematics, Ané's research interests shifted toward more applied topics in the intersection of biology and statistics, because of their real-world applications including adaptation for climate change .[ 2] She is part of an international consortium seeking to clarify the evolutionary history of the monocots .[ 6] Beyond plant evolution, she has also participated in research using the history of coevolution of herpes with humans to confirm the African origin of humans.[ 7]
References
^ a b c "Cécile Ané, Professor of Botany and Statistics" , Staff , University of Wisconsin–Madison Department of Botany, August 25, 2017, retrieved 2023-07-10
^ a b "Cécile Ané" , Faces of Data Science , University of Wisconsin–Madison, January 31, 2023, retrieved 2023-07-10
^ "Cécile Ané" , Staff , University of Wisconsin–Madison Center for Interdisciplinary French Studies, November 2019, retrieved 2023-07-10
^ "Cécile Ané" , Theses.fr , retrieved 2023-07-10
^ Cécile Ané at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
^ New research initiative on monocot evolution (PDF) (Press release), University of Wisconsin–Madison Department of Botany, retrieved 2023-07-10
^ Un virus de l'herpès confirme l'origine africaine de l'humanité (in French), VOA Afrique, October 25, 2013, retrieved 2023-07-10
External links
International National Academics Other