Research in the Good (?) Old Days

Date: Thursday 15 June 2023, 5.30PM
Location: University of Warwick
Mathematical Science Building Room MB0.08

Campus map available at https://warwick.ac.uk/about/visiting/maps/
Local Group Meeting


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This talk is a look back at a working life in statistics, focussed on research and lecturing, starting as a young PhD researcher in 1964.
 
This talk is a look back at a working life in statistics, focussed on research and lecturing, starting as a young PhD researcher in 1964.  The aim is to point to the technological changes, and personally as my example, to show how life progressed in universities.  I’ll mention how a problem of Poisson processes led to a first crossing of the Atlantic in  the QE2.  I’ll describe the landscape of university statistics in my early years - research was squeezed in, computing was mechanical, presentation and copying were primitive, teaching loads were onerous, admin became demanding. Not all bad however, with life-long friends, many research satisfactions,  international personal and family travel. Finally, I’ll briefly go back to a problem of  point processes in my thesis I left 54 years ago and just recently still haven’t been able to solve completely, in spite of post-cataract lenses… .
 
 
Professor Tony Lawrance
 
Contact Kristian Romano