The Book, Cat, & Cat Book Lovers Almanac

of historical trivia regarding books, cats, and other animals. Actually this blog has evolved so that it is described better as a blog about cats in history and culture. And we take as a theme the advice of Aldous Huxley: If you want to be a writer, get some cats. Don't forget to see the archived articles linked at the bottom of the page.

July 23, 2012

July 23, 2006

Harvard professor Joseph K. Blitztstein became tenured faculty, in the statistics department in 2011. This department was founded by Frederick Mosteller, (December 24, 1916 to July 23, 2006,), one of the most eminent statisticians of the 20th century.

Here is how Corydon Ireland, a Harvard staff writer, described Blitzstein, in the November 10, 2011 edition of the Harvard Gazette. Our mildly edited quote starts with the challenges facing statistics students:

The science of confounding variables and regression analysis “often turns into this ugly cookbook thing, with ugly formulas,” said Blitzstein. But if it’s taught as a real-world science, with elegant principles, he said, students go beyond fragmentary facts into a world of “expert knowledge.”....When news of his tenure appointment arrived earlier this year, Blitzstein would have celebrated, he said, “but I have too much work to do.” This semester, he is teaching three courses: Stat 110 with 280 students (it had 80 registrants when he took over in 2006); Stat 210, a Ph.D.-level probability course with 54 students; and a graduate seminar on reading landmark statistician and geneticist Ronald A. Fisher (1890-1962) in the original, right back to journals from the 1920s. “You can see all the brilliance there,” said Blitzstein. Then there are this semester’s advisement obligations. He oversees four Ph.D. dissertations and two undergraduate theses, and co-advises 50 undergraduate concentrators — many of them drawn in by Stat 110.

But nothing these days matches the stress of his last and sixth year as a mathematics Ph.D. student at Stanford University. “I was desperately trying to finish my thesis, look for jobs, and teach,” said Blitzstein. “In my life, I’ve been pretty lucky — I don’t get stressed out. But the stress was really getting to me.” To wind down every night, he gave himself 30 minutes to read from George R.R. Martin’s “A Song of Ice and Fire” fantasy series — mystical, dark novels set in a Middle Ages that never was. Despite the brooding subject matter, he said, “I started having very sweet dreams.”The sweetest of them for young Blitzstein came in March 2006, in the form of a late-night phone call from [Harvard professor] Meng. Did he want a job at Harvard? “It was incredibly exciting news,” he said, and it took him quickly from a lifetime in California to a fresh start in New England.

“I made three simultaneous life transitions,” said Blitzstein: moving from west to east; moving from student to faculty; and moving from mathematics to statistics. “I’ve really engaged all three of them.Of the first, he said: No California house ever needed heat, but it could get cold. “Here,” said a cheerful Blitzstein, “there is always heat.” Of the last, he said that statistics satisfied an urge he acquired as a graduate student in mathematics to engage the world in practical ways, beyond pure numbers. As an undergraduate at theCalifornia Institute of Technology, Blitzstein considered a career in astronomy and physics before settling on mathematics. He admired the “brilliant, intuitive arguments” physicists made, but “felt more comfortable with things I could prove.”At Stanford, Blitzstein discovered the world of probability theory, an interface between mathematics and statistics and one way a mathematician can address real-world problems. ....Blitzstein specializes in the statistics of networks, developing models and methods for studying vastly complicated “natural” patterns of interdependency and connection at the heart of social networks, ecology, biology, information systems, and even disease patterns. Social scientists and others are confronted with masses of data, said Blitzstein, but so far there is “little statistical theory” about how to analyze it.

Is there life outside Harvard? “I have cats,” said Blitzstein, as if that answered everything. His website — illustrated by M.C. Escher drawings, formulas, and diagrams — includes the sentiment, “Books, cats. Life is sweet.”

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