Norman Breslow

Norman E. Breslow
Born (1941-02-21)February 21, 1941
Died December 9, 2015(2015-12-09) (aged 74)
Nationality American
Fields Statistics
Institutions University of Washington
Alma mater Stanford University
Doctoral advisor Bradley Efron
Doctoral students Nilanjan Chatterjee, Xihong Lin, John J. Crowley, Kung-Yee Liang, Bruce G. Lindsay
Notable awards Snedecor Award (1995)

Norman Edward Breslow (February 21, 1941 – December 9, 2015) was an American statistician and medical researcher. At the time of his death, he was Professor (Emeritus) of Biostatistics in the School of Public Health, of the University of Washington. He is co-author or author of hundreds of published works during 1967 to 2015.[1]

Among his many accomplishments is his work with co-author Nicholas Day that developed and popularized the use of case-control matched sample research designs, in the two-volume work Statistical Methods in Cancer Research. This was with view that matched sample studies have a role within larger program of many types of studies, in making progress on a vast and important problem like cancer. Matched sample studies can quickly and cheaply test some hypothesized relationships, but their apparent findings are not definitive, and there's much they cannot accomplish. Their results, however, can inform the design of slow and expensive longitudinal large-cohort studies that are definitive, for example. Dose-response studies and other studies, too, are elements of a rational scientific program to address cancer. In 2015, he died of prostate cancer.[2]

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