Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11718/13075
Title: Is Statistics Everywhere? Some far-reaching case studies in Health and Medical Science
Authors: Mardia, Prof. Kanti
Keywords: Health;Medical Science
Issue Date: 19-Jan-2015
Publisher: Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad
Abstract: The aim of this talk is to provide various case studies in health and medical science which have come through my international, industrial and interdisciplinary collaborations. The first case study is concerned with saving lives by analysing the shape of the brain. Specifically, the methods have been used on brain images to assess the extent of brain damage in people suffering from fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD) and in turn our assessments have been used in court cases related to the death penalty for murderers, as well as to eligibility for state social benefits for babies. This work is having a very high societal impact. (Mardia, K.V. et al. (2013) Alcohol, babies and the death penalty: Saving lives by analysing the shape of the brain. Significance, Vol 10. The talk will also briefly describe other case studies related to skull implants, hemi-facial microsomia, scoliosis and antibodies. One of the aims of these case studies is to highlight that statistics has really no boundaries, and that interdisciplinary research could be like planting a mango tree which takes a long time to fruit. Such research of high impact has a much broader vision. (Mardia, K.V. and Gilks, W. (2005) Meeting the Statistical Needs of 21st-century Science. Significance, Vol 2). Einstein once gave a warning about a fairly well-known physicist engaged in incremental research: ‘He strikes me as a man who looks for the thinnest spot in a board and then bores as many holes as possible through it’.
Description: The CMHS seminar held at Wing 11 Faculty Lounge, IIM Ahmedabad on Monday, ​​January ​1​9,​ 2015 by Prof. Kanti Mardia, Senior Research Professor, University of Oxford and University of Leeds, Fellow of Kellogg College, Oxford, United Kingdom
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11718/13075
Appears in Collections:Centre for Management of Health Services (CMHS) Seminar

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