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2020 CRM-SSC Prize Recipient
CRM > Prizes > CRM-SSC Prize > Recipients > Johanna Nešlehová

2020 CRM-SSC Prize Recipient
Erica Moodie (McGill University)
[ français ]

The CRM-SSC Prize in Statistics is awarded annually by the Centre de recherches mathématiques (CRM) and the Statistical Society of Canada (SSC) in recognition of outstanding research carried out primarily in Canada by a statistician during the first fifteen years after completing a PhD. The 2020 recipient of this prize is Erica Moodie, William Dawson Scholar and Associate Professor in the Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health at McGill University.

Erica was born and raised in Winnipeg. Her interest in science, shared by her sister Zoe who is also a biostatistician, was fostered by their parents, zoologist Ric Moodie and biostatistician Patricia F. Moodie. After studying mathematics and statistics at the University of Winnipeg (BA, 2000), Erica specialized in epidemiology at the University of Cambridge (MPhil, 2001) and in biostatistics at the University of Washington (MSc, 2004; PhD, 2006). She joined McGill as an Assistant Professor in 2006 and was promoted to the rank of Associate Professor in 2012. She was the Director of the Biostatistics Graduate Programs from 2012-2019.

In her thesis, written under the supervision of Thomas Richardson, Erica studied inference for optimal dynamic treatment regimes (DTR). DTRs are sequential decision-making strategies that define rules for optimal allocation of resources. Over the past 15 years Erica has established herself as a world expert in this area. With two books and over 130 peer-reviewed research papers to date, she has become one of the most prominent biostatisticians of her generation. Her papers have appeared in Biometrics, Biometrika, JASA, Statistics in Medicine and many other top-tier international journals.

Through her research, Erica has made a fundamental shift in the way that DTR estimators are used and viewed. Many traditional approaches to DTR estimation are opaque. In a series of papers on this topic, she has proposed a new form of regression-based estimation which ensures interpretability and accessibility to end-users in a broad range of fields. This work, beginning with postdoctoral researcher Michael Wallace (now at Waterloo) and continued with several other trainees, includes a suite of model selection, diagnostic, and validation tools, which were notably absent in nearly all alternative methods. Her approach, implemented in R, has raised the bar for all subsequent DTR analyses.

Erica's work in dynamic decision-making sits within the more general area of causal inference, where interest lies in determining the un-confounded effect of specific treatment factors on the outcome. With postdoctoral fellow Olli Saarela (University of Toronto) and McGill collaborator David Stephens, she developed new insights into Bayesian causal procedures that bridge two traditionally distinct areas of statistics. With her PhD student Mireille Schnitzer (Université de Montréal) she extended the use of targeted maximum likelihood estimation to more general settings. With PhD students Ryan Kyle (plotly) and Nabila Parveen (Health Canada) she considered extensions of, and applications for, measurement error corrections in settings involving systematic undercounting or covariate dependent errors.

Today, Erica's work lies at the heart of DTR research. In 2013, she coauthored with Bibhas Chakraborty the first textbook on statistical aspects of DTRs. This bestseller, published by Springer, was followed in 2016 by an authoritative collection of works describing the current tools available to implement DTR analysis, which Erica co-edited with Michael Kosorok.

In contributions to epidemiology with her colleagues Marina Klein, Joe Cox and numerous PhD students, Erica has also applied causal inference techniques to investigate questions relating to, e.g., the interplay between food insecurity and depression, and determining individual- and community-level factors associated with prescription and illicit drug use in an HIV-HCV coinfected population. In total, Erica has supervised 15 MSc and 18 PhD students, as well as 7 postdoctoral fellows.

Erica has demonstrated exceptional leadership at the national and international level. She has been an Associate Editor for Biometrics (since 2013) and served in the same capacity for JASA — Theory & Methods (2014-2019). Moreover, she was the Scientific Program Chair of the 2017 SSC Annual Meeting, and she was an Associate Director of CANSSI. She was also co-chair of the Causal Inference group in the STRATOS initiative of the International Society for Clinical Biostatistics.

In recognition of her contributions, Erica was listed as one of the top 50 researchers worldwide in causal inference (The American Statistician, 2017) and she won the McGill Principal's Prize for Outstanding Emerging Researchers in 2018. She became an elected member of the International Statistical Institute in 2015 and was a recipient of Excellence in Mentoring Awards by her department in 2017 and 2019. She is grateful to her husband and two boys for laughter, support, and keeping her active.

The citation for the award reads:

To Erica Moodie, for her outstanding contributions to biostatistics, notably in causal inference, precision medicine, and dynamic treatment regimes, and her influential contributions to substantive areas of application such as HIV and mental health.

Erica Moodie is the twenty-second recipient of the CRM-SSC Prize.
For a complete list of the previous winners of this award, see.

Christian Genest was primarily responsible for producing this material.


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Prizes
The CRM created and administers, either alone or jointly, four of the eight major national prizes in the mathematical sciences, namely:  the CRM–Fields–PIMS Prize,  the Prize for Theoretical Physics awarded in collaboration with the Canadian Association of Physicists (CAP), the Prize for young researchers in Statistics awarded jointly with the Statistical Society of Canada (SSC), and the CRM Aisenstadt Prize awarded to rising young Canadian stars, selected by CRM's Scientific Advisory Panel. The CRM has invested enormously in time, effort and in its own resources, to propel leading Canadian scientists into the spotlight, giving them international recognition when they most need it. 

CRM–Fields–PIMS Prize