Linda Zhao | |
Alma Mater: | |
Thesis Title: | Frequentist and Bayesian aspects of some nonparametric estimation problems |
Thesis Url: | https://catalog.library.cornell.edu/catalog/2349292 |
Thesis Year: | 1993 |
Doctoral Advisor: | Lawrence D. Brown |
Workplaces: |
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Fields: | Statistics |
Spouse: | Lawrence D. Brown |
Linda Hong Zhao is a Chinese-American statistician. She is a Professor of Statistics and at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. She is a Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics. Zhao specializes in modern machine learning methods.
In 1982, Zhao obtained her Bachelor of Science from the Department of Mathematics at Nankai University. She later emigrated to the United States and attended Cornell University, where she obtained her Ph.D from the Department of Statistics in 1993.[1]
Zhao became an assistant professor statistics at University of California, Los Angeles in 1993,[2] before joining the Wharton School in 1994, where she is currently a Professor of Statistics.
Her specialty falls in modern machine learning methods, replicability in science, high dimensional data, housing price prediction, and Bayesian methods. Current projects include equity ownership network, and its relationship to firm performance and innovation activities; identify signals from noisy data using non-parametric Bayesian scheme; and model-free data analysis.[3] Her work has won National Science Foundation support for over 20 years.[4]
Zhao was married to Lawrence D. Brown (1940–2018), a fellow statistician at the Wharton School.[5] [6]