Stanley Wasserman

Stanley S. Wasserman
Born (1951-08-29) August 29, 1951
Louisville, Kentucky, USA
Nationality American
Fields Statistics
Institutions Indiana University
Rudy Professor of Statistics,
Psychology, and Sociology
Alma mater University of Pennsylvania
Harvard University
Doctoral advisor Frederick Mosteller
Known for Social Network Analysis,
Mathematical Sociology
Network Science
Multidimensional Network

Stanley Wasserman (born August 29, 1951) is an American statistician and Rudy Professor of Statistics, Psychology, and Sociology at Indiana University Bloomington, known for his work on social network analysis, mathematical sociology, network science and multidimensional network.

Biography

Born in Louisville, Kentucky, Wasserman obtained his BSc in economics from the University of Pennsylvania in 1973, and his MA in Business & Applied Economics in 1973. He then moved to Harvard University, where he obtained his MA in Statistics in 1974, and his PhD in Statistics in 1977 with the thesis, entitled "Stochastic Models for Directed Graphs" under supervision of Frederick Mosteller.[1]

Wasserman started his career in 1974 at the National Bureau of Economics Research as Research Assistant and System Consultant in Statistics. After a year as Instructor at Harvard University, and as a Visiting Instructor at Carnegie-Mellon University, he started in 1977 as Assistant Professor at the University of Minnesota. In 1982 he moved to the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, where he was appointed Associate Professor and in 1988 Professor of Psychology, Statistics, and Sociology. Since 2004 he is the James H. Rudy Professor of Statistics, Psychology, and Sociology at Indiana University in Bloomington.

Wasserman was awarded the J. Parker Bursk Memorial Award in 1973. He was elected Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 1991, and Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1996.

Work

Social network analysis

In their 1994 "Advances in social network analysis," Wasserman and Joseph Galaskiewicz address:

... the issue of how effectively to apply the latest developments in social network analysis to behavioural and social science disciplines. Topics examined include: ways to specify the network contents to be studied; how to select the method for representing network structures; how social network analysis has been used to study interorganizational relations via the resource dependence model; how to use a contact matrix for studying the spread of disease in epidemiology; and how cohesion and structural equivalence network theories relate to studying social influence. The book also offers some statistical models for social support networks.[2]

Books

References

  1. Stanley Wasserman, CV. January 2007 at stat.indiana.edu. Accessed 02.02.2015
  2. Galaskiewicz and Wasserman (1994/2006)

External links

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