Raquel Prado (born 1970) is a Venezuelan Bayesian statistician. She is a professor of statistics in the Jack Baskin School of Engineering of the University of California, Santa Cruz, [1] and has been elected president of the International Society for Bayesian Analysis for the 2019 term. [2]
Prado specializes in Bayesian inference for time series data. [1] With Mike West, she is the author of the book Time Series: Modeling, Computation, and Inference (Texts in Statistical Science, CRC Press, 2010). [3]
Prado was born on April 24, 1970, in Caracas, and graduated from Simón Bolívar University in 1993. [4] She completed her Ph.D. in statistics at Duke University in 1998. Her dissertation, Latent Structure in Non-Stationary Time Series, was supervised by Mike West. [4] [5]
After completing her Ph.D. she returned to Simón Bolívar University as a faculty member before moving to Santa Cruz. [6]
In 1999, Prado and her co-authors Andrew Krystal and Mike West won the Outstanding Statistical Application Award of the American Statistical Association for their work on statistical analysis of electroencephalography data. [7] In 2013, Prado became a Fellow of the American Statistical Association. [8]
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link)Raquel Prado (born 1970) is a Venezuelan Bayesian statistician. She is a professor of statistics in the Jack Baskin School of Engineering of the University of California, Santa Cruz, [1] and has been elected president of the International Society for Bayesian Analysis for the 2019 term. [2]
Prado specializes in Bayesian inference for time series data. [1] With Mike West, she is the author of the book Time Series: Modeling, Computation, and Inference (Texts in Statistical Science, CRC Press, 2010). [3]
Prado was born on April 24, 1970, in Caracas, and graduated from Simón Bolívar University in 1993. [4] She completed her Ph.D. in statistics at Duke University in 1998. Her dissertation, Latent Structure in Non-Stationary Time Series, was supervised by Mike West. [4] [5]
After completing her Ph.D. she returned to Simón Bolívar University as a faculty member before moving to Santa Cruz. [6]
In 1999, Prado and her co-authors Andrew Krystal and Mike West won the Outstanding Statistical Application Award of the American Statistical Association for their work on statistical analysis of electroencephalography data. [7] In 2013, Prado became a Fellow of the American Statistical Association. [8]
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