Current PhD Students
-
Yanhui Zhang, 2024-present, PhD Student
-
Yingying Shang, 2024-present, PhD Student
-
Jingyi Ni, 2022-present, PhD Student
Past PhD Students
-
Jiajin Wei, 2020-2024, PhD in Statistics
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Mathematics, Hong Kong Baptist University
-
Jiandong Shi, 2018-2021, PhD in Statistics
Current Position: Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Statistics, Chinese University of Hong Kong
-
Ke Yang, 2018-2021, PhD in Statistics
Current Position: Assistant Professor, Department of Statistics and Data Science, Beijing University of Technology, Beijing, China
-
Xiao Ke, 2017-2020, PhD in Statistics (Joint with Professor Guoliang Tian from Southern University of Science and Technology)
Current Position: Assistant Professor, College of Big Data and Internet, Shenzhen Technology University, Shenzhen, China
-
Wei Shen, 2016-2019, PhD in Operations Research (Joint with Professor Xiaoming Yuan from University of Hong Kong)
Current Position: Assistant Professor, School of Statistics, Tianjin University of Finance and Economics, Tianjin, China
-
Enxuan Lin, 2016-2019, PhD in Statistics
Current Position: Biostatistician, Innovent Biologics Co. Ltd., Beijing, China
-
Zongliang Hu, 2015-2018, PhD in Statistics
Current Position: Associate Professor, Department of Statistics, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen, China
-
Dehui Luo, 2014-2017, PhD in Statistics
Current Position: Lecturer and Director of the MSc Programme, Department of Mathematics, Hong Kong Baptist University
-
Kai Dong, 2012-2015, PhD in Statistics
Current Position: Data Analyst, China Daily Hong Kong Limited, Hong Kong
-
Wenlin Dai, 2011-2014, PhD in Statistics
Current Position: Associate Professor, Institute of Statistics and Big Data, Renmin University of China, Beijing, China
Message to Prospective PhD Students
If you enjoy doing simple research, e.g. meta-analysis, then I might be the right person for you to work with in the next 4 years of your PhD study.
Nevertheless, when I say it simple research, simple does not mean easy, and hence it should not be an excuse that you can be bad at math.
I would expect that you can do some deep research, but meanwhile, you are also able to present your work in a simple way so that readers can easily follow it.
Being a PhD student majoring in statistics, math must be something you enjoy and are good at — everything else you can learn thereafter.
On the day receiving your PhD degree, I sincerely hope that you will have been equipped with good statistical thinking,
sharp critical thinking (不轻信,不盲从,不武断), and willing to keep thinking, rather than you just have a good-looking CV showing that you have learned how to publish papers in academic journals.