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J. Zidek
My research has two major themes. The first concerns the issue of how best
to use statistical information in decision making and inference. Producing
an estimate would be an example of such a decision. I and my
co-investigators consider the problem in the abstract. The work takes
account of the inevitable uncertainty in the information generated provided
by the data. It incorporates the knowledge gained from previous data or
from prior experience. And it takes account of the potential consequences
(or value) of any specific decision that might be taken.
One specific problem of interest concerns a team or committee of experts
mutually selecting a decision when the members of the team (of, say,
medical specialists) have different value scales, different information and
different levels of uncertainty about their information. A surprising
conclusion is that under some circumstances the team is better off not
getting additional information. A second problem deals with the
incorporation of the relevant information in data obtained for purposes
other than those in a current investigation. New methods are being explored.
Environmental health studies provide the second source of my current
research topics. Again abstract theory forms the core of the work, with
excursions into the implementation of the resulting theory. My initial
interest was prompted by the need to develop a statistical design for
assessing the negative environmental impact, if any, of wildcat
(exploratory) drilling in the Beaufort Sea. That was followed by a search
for trends in the acidity of acid rainfall. This led to the development of
methods of designing networks for monitoring spatial pollution fields, for
interpolating between existing monitoring sites to find out what goes on in
between, and finally to methods of smoothing the noise out of the data
obtained form such network data. Now in turn, the use of this methodology
in applications is being explored. In particular, a current study is
exploring air pollution and the effect of human exposure to such pollution,
both long and short term. Of special interest are airborne particulates
that appear to be associated with respiratory disease and with mortality.
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