Peter John Diggle | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1950-02-24)24 February 1950 (age 75) Lancashire, United Kingdom |
| Alma mater | University of Liverpool University of Oxford Newcastle University |
| Known for | Spatial Statistics Longitudinal Data Time-series analysis |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Statistics |
| Institutions | Newcastle University University of Lancaster |
| Thesis | Spatial Processes with Applications in Ecology (1977) |
| Academic advisors | Julian Besag |
Peter John Diggle, (born 24 February 1950, inLancashire, England) is a Britishstatistician. He holds concurrent appointments with the Faculty of Health and Medicine atLancaster University, and the Institute of Infection and Global Health at theUniversity of Liverpool.[1] From 2004 to 2008 he was anEPSRC Senior Research Fellow.[2] He is one of the founding co-editors of the journalBiostatistics.[3]
Previously, he has held positions atNewcastle University, and theCommonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation in Australia. He also holds honorary appointments withJohns Hopkins,Columbia andYale.[1]
He attended school in Scotland, where discovered his affinity and aptitude in mathematics.[4]
Diggle originally attended Edinburgh University to study mathematics, but halfway through, he was transferred to theUniversity of Liverpool, where he studied "Computational and Statistical Science" (B.Sc. 1972). Under the tutelage ofJulian Besag, he began to gain an interest in statistics.[4]
He matriculated at theUniversity of Oxford and in 1973, gained his masters in statistics, by thesis "Contagion and Allied Processes" (M.Sc., 1973). After completion of his masters, Diggle enrolled in a PhD programme atNewcastle-upon-Tyne, where he gained his doctorate in 1977 in statistics by thesis, with the research topic "Spatial Processes with Applications in Ecology".[5]
From 1974 to 1983, Peter held a lectureship at Newcastle University for statistics before becoming a reader for the duration of 1984. While at Newcastle, he went underRobin Plackett’s wing, whose obituary he wrote.[5]
Spatial statistics was still a relatively new field in the 70s. Peter took part in organising conferences for this field. Virtually everyone in the country who worked in spatial statistics (between 30 – 50 people) would attend these conferences in Newcastle.[5]
He worked in the CSIRO division for Mathematics and Statistics in Australia. He started as a senior research scientist from 1985 – 1986. Then, from 1986 – 1987, he became a chief research scientist until his promotion to Chief of Division from 1987 – 1988. From 1988 – 2007, he became a professor of statistics at Lancaster University.[5]
He was awarded theGuy Medal in Silver by the Royal Statistical Society in 1997 and the Guy Medal in Gold in 2024.[6]
His works have been recognised by many statistical societies, but some of the most notable recognitions are:
Diggle's main methodological research interests are in spatial statistics, longitudinal data analysis and environmental epidemiology. Most of his research is motivated by applications in the biomedical, clinical or health sciences. Diggle has a particular interest in real-time health surveillance and in tropical disease epidemiology. He also leads the CHICAS research group (a research group at the University of Lancaster).[10]
In April 2020, the RSS formed a COVID-19 task force. The task force is using their statistical expertise to help with COVID data collection and analysis. Peter Diggle is part of this task force.[11]
Professor Peter Diggle has authored a range of texts detailing methods in geostatistics. Below are titles of some of his most influential work: