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Brief
History of the Department
The Department of Statistics at the University of Michigan was founded in
1969. However, Statistics at Michigan has a long history and tradition
dating back to the 1920's. The University of Michigan was one of the first
two American universities (along with University of Iowa) to offer
academic programs in mathematical statistics. Harry C. Carver, who started
this program, also founded and funded a new journal called the Annals of
Mathematical Statistics in 1933. This journal developed into the premiere
journal in Mathematical Statistics. It was split into into two journals,
Annals of Statistics and Annals of Probability, in 1973 and they
constitute the most prestigious journals in the profession on theoretical
statistics and probability. Professor Carver also played a major role in
the founding of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (IMS). The IMS
was founded at a meeting in Ann Arbor in September of 1935. The institute
subsequently adopted the Annals of Mathematical Statistics as its official
journal.
An increasing number of major universities in the US started to establish
separate departments of statistics during the 1950's and 1960's. There
were several efforts in the 1960's by statistics faculty in Department of
Mathematics at Michigan to start a separate department. An agreement was
finally reached in Spring of 1968, and a new Department of Statistics was
founded within the College of Literature, Science & the Arts
(LS&A) in September 1, 1969. There were about ten faculty members with
Bill Ericson as the first Chair. The department was located in Mason Hall
(its home for the next 30 years).
The period 1969-76 was one of growth. The graduate program was developed,
and many new graduate courses were introduced. The number of graduate
students increased from five to forty and total course enrollments almost
doubled. The first Master's degree was awarded in 1971 and the first Ph.D.
in 1972. During this period, 13 students received their Ph.D. while about 50 earned their master's degrees. Popular courses in
applied statistics were introduced and a Master's degree program was
developed jointly with several departments. The size of the faculty
remained constant at about ten FTE's.
Starting in the late 1970's, the department has had primary responsibility
for teaching undergraduate statistics courses within the College of
LS&A. Since that time, the department has developed and offered many
new introductory courses for students in other departments. These include
currently popular courses such as Stat 100 and Stat 350. The department
also jointly developed and offered courses with other departments such as
Industrial & Operations Engineering, Mathematics, Biostatistics, and
Business School.
The department's undergraduate concentration program in Statistics was
established in 1977. A new Master's degree in Applied Statistics was
created in 1985. Starting in 1999, we offer an undergraduate minors
programs in Applied Statistics and one in Statistics. The program averages
graduates of between 10-15 each year.
Faculty research interests cover a broad range of areas. We have
traditionally had strong interests in several areas of theoretical
statistics and methodology. Recent faculty additions have broadened the
department's research interests substantially. The department also has
substantial cross-disciplinary research activities in several major areas,
including engineering, social sciences, and life sciences.
The following have served as department Chairs: Bill
Ericson (1969-77); Michael Woodroofe (1977-83); Ed Rothman (1983-89); Robb
Muirhead (1989-95); Jeff Wu (1995-98); Vijay Nair (1998-03); Julian
Faraway (2003-04); Vijay Nair (2004-present).
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