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I obtained a DPhil in Mathematics from the University of Oxford under the supervision of Graham Higman. My thesis was about finite permutation groups. I spent six years working in the Faculty of Mathematics at the Open University. In the middle of that period I had a post-doctoral research fellowship at Edinburgh University, where I worked with Desmond Patterson of the Agricultural Research Council's Unit of Statistics and converted myself into a statistician. I put my new knowledge into practice in 10 years in the Statistics Department of Rothamsted Experimental Station. Following that I was Professor of Mathematical Sciences at Goldsmiths' College, University of London, before moving to my present position.
In June 2007, my colleagues held a birthday conference for me.
In July-August 2008 I was coorganizer of a programme on the Design of Experiments at the Isaac Newton Institute, Cambridge. I am now coorganizer of a six-month programme on the Design and Analysis of Experiments to be held at INI from July to December 2011.
I have served on the British Combinatorial Committee, Council of the London Mathematical Society, the Research Section of the Royal Statistical Society, the Committee of the UK TeX Users' Group, the Joint Mathematical Council, and the Council of the International Biometric Society. From November 2000 to November 2002 I was president of the British Region of the International Biometric Society.
Related to this are certain finite combinatorial objects (such as Latin squares, incomplete block designs, association schemes) and their automorphism groups.
I also made a very modest mathematical contribution to some air navigation software.
I do care about the public understanding of science, especially statistics and mathematics. I was president of the Mathematical Sciences section of the British Association for the Advancement of Science from 1997 to 1998. I was a contributor to the booklet Making Sense of Statistics launched by Sense About Science on 29 April 2010.
This is linked to concern about pre-university education. I contributed to the booklet A new level published by Reform on 16 June 2009.
I believe that university students should be able to be confident that they are being taught by people who are immersed in the subject in other ways than teaching. I collaborate with a range of scientists on the design of their experiments and the analysis of their data, so I teach Statistics. I still prove theorems in Combinatorics and Algebra, so I also teach those subjects.
Address:School of Mathematical SciencesQueen Mary, University of London Mile End Road London E1 4NS U.K.
Telephone: +44 20 7882 5517 |
Page modified 24/10/10