Yuzheng Dun
Kim Clay
Administrative Coordinator to Nilanjan Chatterjee, PhD
Bloomberg Distinguished Professor
Johns Hopkins University
Bloomberg School of Public Health
Department of Biostatistics
kphilpo3@jhmi.edu
(Phone) 410-955-3067
Advisees
Nilanjan Chatterjee Faculty Spotlight
Bloomberg Distinguished Professor Nilanjan Chatterjee points to his childhood in India, attending public schools, as a driving force behind his work in applying mathematical statistics and probability theo
This Johns Hopkins tool can help companies determine who should get vaccinated first
Hopkins has made the tool available online for use by public #health officials, employers, universities and anyone else who might be curious to determine the
Student paper award from Statistical Genetics and Genomics Section (SGGS) of ASA
Congratulations to Haoyu Zhang. He has been selected to receive the student paper award from Statistical Genetics and Genomics Section (SGGS) of ASA for his work on methods for accounting tumor characteristics in GWAS of cancers.
Study Finds Genetic Basis of Common Diseases May Span Tens of Thousands of SNPs
Scientists in the U.S. and Korea have developed a statistical method for estimating the broad numbers of DNA variations that impact on different physical traits, such as height or childhood IQ, and on a wide range of diseases, from diabetes to bipolar disorder.
Amstat magazine interview for COPPS Presidents' Award
The Committee of Presidents of Statistical Societies (COPSS) annually presents awards to honor statisticians under the age of 41 for their outstanding research contributions and service to further the field of statistics.
Interview with The Hindu
“A lot of scientific questions in medicine are mathematical [in nature],” said Dr.
LA Times article on breast cancer risk modeling
Ask almost any health-conscious woman who’s mustered under a giant pink ribbon, and she’ll tell you what an American woman’s chances are of getting breast cancer in her lifetime: 1 in 8.
Even People With Breast Cancer Risk Genes Can Lower Risk
Even people who carry genetic changes that put them at higher-than-average risk of breast cancer can lower that risk — sometimes by a lot, researchers said Thursday.