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Ingrid Van Keilegom

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Ingrid Van Keilegom (born 24 December 1971 in Antwerp) is a Belgian statistician. She is a professor of statistics at KU Leuven, and a part-time professor at the Université catholique de Louvain. Her research interests include survival analysis, non- and semiparametric regression, quantile regression, measurement errors, and mathematical statistics.[1]

Education and career

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Van Keilegom earned a licentiate in mathematical sciences from Universitaire Instelling Antwerpen in 1993, a master's degree in biostatistics from Limburgs Universitair Centrum in 1998,[1] and a doctorate in statistics from Limburgs Universitair Centrum in 1998. Her dissertation, Nonparametric estimation of the conditional distribution in regression with censored data, was supervised by Noël Veraverbeke.[1][2]

After working as an assistant professor at Pennsylvania State University (1998-1999) and Eindhoven University of Technology (1999-2000), she returned to Belgium in 2000 with a position at the Université catholique de Louvain. In 2016 she switched her full professorship there to a part-time position, to take another full professorship at KU Leuven.[1]

Recognition

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Ingrid Van Keilegom gave the IMS Medallion lecture at the 2023 Joint Statistical Meetings in Toronto, Canada. She was awarded a Honorary Doctorate from the University of A Coruña in Spain in 2022. She became an Elected member of the Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium for Science and the Arts in 2021. Van Keilegom has also been a Fellow of the American Statistical Association since 2013,[1][3] and she was named a Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics in 2008 "for contributions to statistical theory and methodology, especially semi- and nonparametric regression, survival analysis, and empirical likelihood methods."[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Curriculum vitae (PDF), October 2024, retrieved 2024-10-13
  2. ^ Ingrid Van Keilegom at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. ^ ASA Fellows list, American Statistical Association, retrieved 2018-02-07
  4. ^ Honored IMS Fellows, Institute of Mathematical Statistics, 25 June 2008, retrieved 2018-02-07
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