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Peter Rousseeuw

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Name
  
Peter Rousseeuw

Peter Rousseeuw wwwkuleuvenbewieiswieenperson00051939photo

Peter J. Rousseeuw (born 13 October 1956 in Wilrijk, Belgium) is a statistician known for his work on robust statistics and cluster analysis. He obtained his PhD in 1981 at the University of Brussels, following research carried out at the ETH in Zurich in the group of Frank Hampel which led to a book on Influence Functions. Later he was professor at the Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands, at the University of Fribourg, Switzerland, and at the University of Antwerp, Belgium. Currently he is professor at KU Leuven, Belgium He is a fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (1993) and the American Statistical Association (1994). His former PhD students include A. Leroy, H. Lopuhaa , G. Molenberghs, C. Croux, M. Hubert, S. Van Aelst and T. Verdonck.

Research

Rousseeuw has authored many publications, see. He proposed the Least Trimmed Squares method and S-estimators for robust regression, which can resist outliers in the data. He also introduced the Minimum Volume Elliposid and Minimum Covariance Determinant methods for robust scatter matrice s. With L. Kaufman he coined the word medoid when proposing the k-medoids method for cluster analysis, also known as Partitioning Around Medoids (PAM). His Silhouette display shows the result of a cluster analysis, and the resulting index is often used to select the number of clusters. The Rousseeuw-Croux scale estimator is an efficient alternative to the median absolute deviation, see robust measures of scale. With I. Ruts and John Tukey he introduced the bagplot, a bivariate generalization of the boxplot. His more recent work has focused on concepts of and algorithms for statistical depth functions in the settings of multivariate, regression and functional data, and on robust principal component analysis His 1984 paper has been reprinted in Breakthroughs in Statistics which aimed to collect and describe the 60 most influential papers in statistics from 1850 to 1990.

References

Peter Rousseeuw Wikipedia