Prominent British statistician Sir David Cox has been
named the inaugural recipient of the International Prize in Statistics. Like the acclaimed Fields
Medal, Abel Prize, Turing Award and Nobel Prize, the International Prize in Statistics is
considered the highest honor in its field. It will be bestowed every other year to an individual or
team for major achievements using statistics to advance science, technology and human
welfare.
This inaugural prize recognises Sir David’s seminal 1972 paper in which he developed the proportional hazards model that today bears his name. The Cox Model has been applied in many fields of science and engineering, from disease risk assessment and treatment evaluation to product liability, school dropout, re-incarceration and AIDS surveillance systems.
His mark on research is so great that his 1972 paper is one of the three most-cited papers in statistics and ranked 16th in Nature’s list of the top 100 most-cited papers of all time for all fields.
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