Canadian statistician
Douglas Paul Wiens is a Canadian statistician ; he is a professor in the Department of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences at the University of Alberta .
Wiens earned a B.Sc. in mathematics (1972), two master's degrees in mathematical logic (1974) and statistics (1979), and a Ph.D. in statistics (1982), all from the University of Calgary .[ 1] As part of his work on mathematical logic, in connection with Hilbert's tenth problem , Wiens helped find a diophantine formula for the primes : that is, multivariate polynomial with the property that the positive values of this polynomial, over integer arguments, are exactly the prime numbers .[ 2] Wiens and his co-authors won the Lester R. Ford award of the Mathematical Association of America in 1977 for their paper describing this result.[ 3] His Ph.D. dissertation was entitled Robust Estimation for Multivariate Location and Scale in the Presence of Asymmetry and was supervised by John R. Collins.[ 4] After receiving his Ph.D. in 1982, Wiens took a faculty position at Dalhousie University , and moved in 1987 to Alberta.[ 1]
Wiens was editor-in-chief of The Canadian Journal of Statistics from 2004 to 2006[ 5] and program chair of the 2003 annual meeting of the Statistical Society of Canada .[ 6] Along with the Ford award, Wiens received The Canadian Journal of Statistics Award in 1990 for his paper "Minimax-variance L - and R -estimators of location".[ 7] In 2005 he was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association .[ 8]
References
^ a b Education and Professional Experience [permanent dead link ] from Wiens' web site at Alberta, retrieved 2010-02-07.
^ Jones, James P.; Sato, Daihachiro ; Wada, Hideo; Wiens, Douglas (1976), "Diophantine representation of the set of prime numbers" , American Mathematical Monthly , 83 (6): 449–464, doi :10.2307/2318339 , JSTOR 2318339 , archived from the original on 2012-02-24 .
^ The Mathematical Association of America's The Lester R. Ford Award Archived 2009-01-30 at the Wayback Machine , retrieved 2010-02-07.
^ Douglas Paul Wiens at the Mathematics Genealogy Project .
^ CJS editorial board , retrieved 2010-01-07.
^ 2003 Annual Meeting in Halifax Archived 2009-12-06 at the Wayback Machine , SSC, retrieved 2010-01-07.
^ The Canadian Journal of Statistics Award , retrieved 2010-01-07.
^ ASA Fellows Archived 2020-04-09 at the Wayback Machine , retrieved 2010-01-07.
External links