|
Personal bio
Susan Holmes was trained in the South of France in computational statistics and data analysis. After teaching at Harvard, MIT and Cornell, she joined the Stanford faculty in 1998. Her main themes of research are pattern searching in microbiology, immunology and other areas of biology. She likes to work with large messy data sets and solves puzzles as a hobby.
Currently teaching
STATS 319: Literature of Statistics
(Autumn)
BIOS 221: Modern Statistics for Modern Biology
(Autumn)
STATS 256: Modern Statistics for Modern Biology
(Autumn)
STATS 366: Modern Statistics for Modern Biology
(Autumn)
STATS 215: Statistical Models in Biology
(Winter)
BIOMEDIN 370: Medical Scholars Research
(Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer)
BIOMEDIN 299: Directed Reading and Research
(Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer)
STATS 398: Industrial Research for Statisticians
(Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer)
STATS 399: Research
(Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer)
PHYSICS 490: Research
(Autumn)
CME 400: Ph.D. Research
(Winter, Spring, Summer)
ENVRES 398: Directed Reading in Environment and Resources
(Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer)
ENVRES 399: Directed Research in Environment and Resources
(Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer)
BIOMEDIN 290: Biomedical Informatics Teaching Methods
(Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer)
|