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Jing Ning

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jing Ning is a Chinese-American professor of biostatistics at the MD Anderson Cancer Center of the University of Texas. Her research interests include biomarkers, semiparametric models in survival analysis, inference with length-biased data, and their applications in modeling the health of cancer patients.[1]

Education and career

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Ning studied statistics at the University of Science and Technology of China, earning a bachelor's degree in 1999 and a master's degree in 2002. She completed a Ph.D. in biostatistics at Johns Hopkins University in 2007.[1] Her dissertation, Estimating causal treatment effects for post-randomization marker data with failure event censoring, was supervised by Mei-Cheng Wang.[2]

She joined the MD Anderson Cancer Center as a postdoctoral researcher from 2007 to 2009,[1] and was an assistant professor in the UTHealth School of Public Health of the University of Texas from 2009 to 2011 before returning to the MD Anderson Cancer Center as a faculty member.[3]

Recognition

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Ning is a Fellow of the American Statistical Association, elected to the 2023 class of fellows.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Jing Ning", Profiles, MD Anderson Cancer Center, retrieved 2023-11-29
  2. ^ Ning, Jing (2007), Estimating causal treatment effects for post-randomization marker data with failure event censoring (Doctoral dissertation), Johns Hopkins University, ProQuest 304612690
  3. ^ Jing Ning (PDF), International Chinese Statistical Association, 2020, retrieved 2023-11-29
  4. ^ 2023 ASA Fellows (PDF), American Statistical Association, retrieved 2023-11-29
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