Program
3rd International Conference on Statistics:
Theory and Applications (ICSTA’21)
July 29 - 31, 2021 | Prague, Czech Republic
Due to COVID'19 pandemic it will be done VIRTUALLY
Our program schedule is based on Eastern Time (ET - Ottawa Time)
Our program is based on EST (Eastern Standard Time - Time zone in Ottawa)
Thursday, July 29
10:00 AM - 12:00 PM | Registrations |
ICSTA'21 Scientific Committee Chair:

Dr. Gangaram S. Ladde
University of South Florida, USA
Conference Chair
Website
8:00 AM - 9:00 AM |
Registration |
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9:00 AM - 9:10 AM |
Official Opening
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9:10 AM - 10:10 AM |
Plenary Lecture
Mathematical Modeling to Inform policy
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10:10 AM - 10:55 AM |
Keynote Lecture
The Concept of Statistical Evidence
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10:55 AM - 11:40 AM |
Keynote Lecture
Consistent Sparse Deep Learning: Theory and Computation
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11:40 AM - 11:55 AM |
Break |
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11:55 AM - 12:40 PM |
Keynote Lecture
Distributed Learning of Finite Gaussian Mixtures
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12:40 PM - 02:25 PM |
Session
Statistics Theory and Applications I |
Plenary Lecture
July 30 | 9:10 AM - 10:10 AM | Session Chair: Dr. Noelle Samia, Northwestern University, USA

Mathematical Modeling to Inform Policy
Dr. Jaline Gerardin, Northwestern University, USA
Jaline Gerardin is Assistant Professor of Preventive Medicine at Northwestern University. Her group uses quantitative methods to support decision-making around policies to manage infectious disease, focusing on malaria and COVID-19.
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Keynote Lecture
July 30 | 10:10 AM - 10:55 AM | Session Chair: Dr. Noelle Samia, Northwestern University, USA

The Concept of Statistical Evidence
Dr. Michael Evans, University of Toronto, Canada
Michael Evans is a Professor of Statistics at the University of Toronto. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Toronto in 1977 and has been employed there ever since with leaves spent at Stanford University and Carnegie Mellon University. He is a Fellow of the American Statistical Association, has served as an Associate Editor of JASA Theory and Methods 1991-2005, an Associate Editor of the Canadian Journal of Statistics 1999-2006, 2017-present, an Associate Editor of the journal Bayesian Analysis 2005-2015 and an Editor 2015-present and is a subject matter Editor for the online journal FACETS. He served as President of the Statistical Society of Canada 2013-2014. His research has been concerned with multivariate statistical methodology, computational statistics, and the foundations of statistics. A current focus of research is the development of a theory of inference based upon an explicit definition of how to measure statistical evidence and the development of tools to deal with criticisms of statistical methodology associated with its inherent subjectivity. He has authored, or coauthored, numerous research papers as well as the books Approximating Integrals via Monte Carlo and Deterministic Methods (with T. Swartz) published by Oxford in 2000, Probability and Statistics: The Science of Uncertainty (with J. Rosenthal) published by W.H. Freeman in 2004 and 2010 and Measuring Statistical Evidence Using Relative Belief published by CRC Press/ Chapman and Hall in 2015.
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Keynote Lecture
July 30 | 10:55 AM - 11:40 AM | Session Chair: Dr. Noelle Samia, Northwestern University, USA

Consistent Sparse Deep Learning: Theory and Computation
Dr. Faming Liang, Purdue University, USA
Faming Liang is Distinguished Professor of Statistics at Purdue University. He is ASA fellow, IMS fellow, and the winner of Youden prize in 2017. Faming has wide research interests, including Monte Carlo methods, machine learning, bioinformatics, high-dimensional statistics, and big data.
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Keynote Lecture
July 30 | 11:55 AM - 12:40 AM | Session Chair: Dr. Noelle Samia, Northwestern University, USA

Distributed Learning of Finite Gaussian Mixtures
Dr. Jiahua Chen, University of British Columbia, Canada
Dr. Jiahua Chen received his Master’s degree from the Institute of System’s Science in Academia Sinica in Jan 1985 under the supervision of Professor Ping Cheng, and Ph. D. degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in July 1990 under the supervision of Professor Jeff Wu.
Dr. Jiahua Chen joined the Department of Statistics and Actuarial Science at the University of Waterloo as a visiting scholar in the year 1989, accepted an assistant professorship in 1991, and was dutifully promoted to associate and full professor during the period until the end of 2006. He then joined the Department of Statistics at the University of British Columbia as Canada Research Chair, Tier I from Jan 2007 until Dec 2020 from which point he remains as a full professor. He worked on problems in the design of experiment, but his research interest quickly extends broadly to include Finite Mixture Models, Empirical Likelihood, Survey Methodology, and many others. He is proud of his result on the periodicity of the minimum aberration fractional factorial designs, the groundbreaking EM-test for the order of finite mixture models, the challenging results on the nearest neighbor imputation in sampling data analysis, the pioneering work of introducing the empirical likelihood to sampling problems, as well as the invention of extended Bayesian information criterion for large model spaces.
Dr. Jiahua Chen is an elected fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics and the American Statistical Association. He is the recipient of the CRM-SSC Prize in Statistics for his outstanding contributions to the statistical sciences. This prestigious award, jointly sponsored by the Statistical Society of Canada(SSC) and the Centre de recherches mathématiques de Montréal (CRM), is given each year to a Canadian statistician in recognition of outstanding contributions to the discipline during the recipient’s first 15 years after earning a doctorate. He received the Gold Medal, the top prize of the Statistical Society of Canada in 2014, the International Chinese Statistical Association distinguished achievement award in 2016.
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Session
July 30 | 12:40 AM - 02:25 PM | Session Chair: Dr. Noelle Samia, Northwestern University, USA & Dr. Kandethody Ramachandran, University of South Florida, USA
Statistics Theory and Applications I
ICSTA 126
Time: 12:40 AM - 12:55 PM
Presenter: Lia Queiroz do Amaral, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil
Authors: Lia Queiroz do Amaral, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil
ICSTA 139
Time: 12:55 PM - 01:10 PM
Presenter: Michael Evans, University of Toronto, Canada
Authors: Michael Evans
ICSTA 127
Time:01:10 PM - 01:25 PM
Presenter: David Dalton, University of Glasgow, UK
Authors: David Dalton, Alan Lazarus Arash Rabbani, Hao Gao, Dirk Husmeier
ICSTA 128
Time:01:25 PM - 01:40 PM
Presenter: Fatimah Alghamdi, University of Durham, UK
Authors: Fatimah Alghamdi,Frank Coolen, Tahani Coolen-Maturi
ICSTA 135
Time:01:40 PM - 01:55 PM
Presenter: Jiahua Chen, University of British Columbia, Canada
Authors: Qiong Zhang, Jiahua Chen
ICSTA 109
Time:01:55 PM - 02:10 PM
Presenter: Dirk Husmeier, University of Glasgow, UK
Authors: L. Mihaela Paun, Agnieszka Borowska, Mitchel J. Colebank, Mette S. Olufsen and Dirk Husmeier
ICSTA 117
Time:02:10 PM - 02:25 PM
Presenter: Phuoc-Loc Tran, Can Tho University, Viet Nam & Feng Chia University, Taiwan
Authors: Phuoc-Loc Tran, Truong-Nhat Le, Shen-Ming Lee, and Chin-Shang Li
ICSTA 137
Time:02:25 PM - 02:40 PM
Presenter: Mena Whalen
Authors: Mena Whalen, Joseph Feinglass, Noelle Samia
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9:00 AM - 9:30 AM |
Keynote Lecture
Statistical Challenges for Studying Replication
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9:00 AM - 10:15 AM |
Keynote Lecture
Identification of Underlying Partial Differential Equations from Noisy
Data with Splines
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10:15 AM - 11:15 AM |
Plenary Lecture
On the Analytic Power of Divide & Recombine (D&R)
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11:15 AM - 11:30 AM |
Break |
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11:30 AM - 01:15 PM |
Session
Statistics Theory and Applications II |
Keynote Lecture
July 31 | 9:00 AM - 9:30 AM | Session Chair: Dr. Noelle Samia, Northwestern University, USA

Statistical Challenges for Studying Replication
Dr. Jacob Schauer, Northwestern University, USA
Jacob Schauer is an assistant professor in the Biostatistics Division of the Department of Preventive Medicine at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine. His applied research concerns interpretable machine learning for medical diagnoses, as well as various issues in medical social sciences, including health disparities and health literacy. His methodological work focuses on approaches to studying replication, incomplete data meta-analyses, and data privacy. Prior to joining Feinberg, Jacob completed his PhD in statistics from Northwestern University in 2018 and worked as a postdoctoral fellow at the Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern from 2018 to 2020.
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Keynote Lecture
July 31 | 09:30 AM - 10:15 AM | Session Chair: Dr. Noelle Samia, Northwestern University, USA

Identification of Underlying Partial Differential Equations from Noisy Data with Splines
Dr. Xiaoming Huo, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Dr. Huo received the B.S. degree in mathematics from the University of Science and Technology, China, in 1993, and the M.S. degree in electrical engineering and the Ph.D. degree in statistics from Stanford University, Stanford, CA, in 1997 and 1999, respectively. Since August 1999, he has been an Assistant/Associate/Full Professor with the School of Industrial and Systems Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta. He represented China in the 30th International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO), which was held in Braunschweig, Germany, in 1989, and received a golden prize. Dr. Huo was a Visiting Fellow at the Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics at the University of California, Los Angeles in the fall of 2004. From August 2013 to August 2015, he served the US National Science Foundation as a Program Director in the Division of Mathematical Sciences (DMS). Dr. Huo has presented keynote talks in major conferences (e.g., The 2nd IEEE Global Conference on Signal and Information Processing, Atlanta, GA, and the IMA-HK-IAS Joint program on statistics and computational interfaces to big data, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong, etc.) and numerous invited colloquia and seminar presentations in the US, Asia, and Europe. Dr. Huo has organized/co-organized sessions/workshop in various statistical conferences. He has been the Specialty Chief Editor in Frontiers in Applied Mathematics and Statistics – Statistics, since April 2021.
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Plenary Lecture
July 31 | 10:15 AM - 11:15 AM | Session Chair: Dr. Noelle Samia, Northwestern University, USA

On the Analytic Power of Divide & Recombine (D&R)
Dr. William S. Cleveland, Purdue University, USA
William S. Cleveland (Bill) received a B.A. in math from Princeton; his thesis advisor was Willy Feller, a famous probabilist. He received a PhD in Statistics from Yale; his advisor was Leonard Jimmie Savage who had resurrected Bayesian statistics by proving it was the optimal approach to statistical decision making. Manny Parzen and Marvin Zelen invited Bill to spend a summer at the Statistics Department of SUNY at Buffalo. Bill then moved on to the Statistics Department at Bell Labs in 1971. There, he had much contact with John Tukey, who revolutionized statistics by developing and injecting into the field:
Analytic methods defined algorithmically, what today we call machine learning; exploratory data analysis and data visualization; and computational methods and systems for data analysis. Bill embraced Tukey’s ideas. In 1999, in a talk at the ISI 52nd ISI Session, and in 2001 in a paper in the ISI Review, Bill advocated an action plan that would add algorithms, data exploration, and computing with data to the field of statistics, and named it “data science”, defining the term as it is used today. Bill also carried out significant work on these additions. In data visualization he published many papers, and wrote two books, The Elements of Graphing Data and Visualizing Data, now classics, and started the new field of graphical perception. He developed the widely used machine learning non-parametric methods loess and stl. In 2004, Bill became the Shanti S. Gupta Distinguished Professor of Statistics at Purdue University. Bill and graduate student Saptarshi Guha developed the Divide and Recombine statistical approach to big data, and implemented it by the RHIPE software: R and Hadoop Integrated Programming Environment (RHIPE).
AWARDS: 2020, Honorary Doctorate from Hasselt University, Belgium; 2016, The Lifetime Achievement Award for Graphics and Computing from the American Statistical Association; 2016 Parzen Prize from Texas A&M University, given every two years since 1994 to a “statistician whose outstanding research contributions include innovations that have had impact on practice”; 2002 Highly Cited Researcher from the American Society for Information Science and Technology; 1996, Statistician of the Year from the Chicago Chapter of the ASA; Three prizes for papers in the journal Technometrics: Youden Prize twice, and the Wilcoxon Prize once. Bill is a Fellow of the American Statistical Association, the Institute of Mathematical Statistics, and the American Association of the Advancement of Science, and is an Elected Member of the International Statistical Institute. Currently, Google Scholar shows 46,993 citations to his work.
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Session
July 31 | 11:30 AM - 01:15 PM | Session Chair: Dr. Noelle Samia, Northwestern University, USA & Dr. Xiaoming Huo Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Statistics Theory and Applications II
ICSTA 129
Time: 11:30 AM - 11:45 AM
Presenter: Maria Ganopoulou, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece
Authors: Maria Ganopoulou, Ioannis Kangelidis, Georgios Sianos, Lefteris Angelis
ICSTA 123
Time: 11:45 AM - 12:00 PM
Presenter: Louis Sharrock, Imperial College London, UK
Authors: Louis Sharrock, Nikolas Kantas, Grigorios Pavliotis, Panos Parpas
ICSTA 125
Time: 12:00 PM - 12:15 PM
Presenter: Shaykhah Aldossari, University of Glasgow, UK
Authors: Shaykhah Aldossari, Dirk Husmeier, Jason Matthiopoulos
ICSTA 132
Time: 12:15 PM - 12:30 PM
Presenter: Kandethody M. Ramachandran, University of South Florida, USA
Authors: Hsiao-Chuan Chou, Kandethody M. Ramachandran
ICSTA 134
Time: 12:30 PM - 12:45 PM
Presenter: Siqi Liang, Purdue University, USA
Authors: Siqi Liang, Wei-Heng Huang, Faming Liang
ICSTA 136
Time: 12:45 PM - 01:00 PM
Presenter: Abby Smith, Northwestern University, USA
Authors: Abby Smith
ICSTA 138
Time: 01:00 PM - 01:15 PM
Presenter: Sebastian Rodriguez, Northwestern University, USA
Authors: Sebastian Rodriguez, Noelle Samia, Jaline Gerardin
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