Longxiang Li
Daniel Mork
Daniel received his PhD from Colorado State University where he developed statistical methods for studying the relationship between maternal exposures to air pollution and birth and children’s health outcomes. His research interests include: statistical machine learning, functional regression, variable selection, effect heterogeneity, and causal inference, with an application to understanding the health effects of environmental exposures.
Robbie M Parks
Jongeun Rhee
Jongeun Rhee, Sc.D., M.S., joined the Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology Branch (OEEB) in September 2019 as a postdoctoral fellow, and was appointed as a research fellow in June 2021. Dr. Rhee completed her Sc.D. in environmental health with a concentration in environmental, occupational, and molecular epidemiology from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston, Massachusetts. For her dissertation research, she investigated associations between air pollution, industry, and socioeconomic…
Evan Rosenman
My research focuses on problems at the interface of the mathematical sciences and public policy. My primary methodological work is in causal inference, focusing on questions of causal “data fusion,” in which observational and experimental data sources are merged. I am also interested in political science and the analysis of American elections. I hold a PhD in Statistics from Stanford University.
Keith Spangler
Keith Spangler is a postdoctoral associate in the Department of Environmental Health and the Biostatistics and Epidemiology Data Analytics Center (BEDAC) at Boston University. His research interests are in the health effects of climate change and its disproportionate impacts on socially vulnerable communities. His recent work includes assessing spatiotemporal changes in heat-related mortality, developing a data repository of spatially resolved heat metrics, and improving exposure measurements for analyzing social determinants…
Xiao Wu
Sarika Aggarwal
Sarika Aggarwal is a 1st year PhD student in the Biostatistics department and previously, received her B.S. in Statistics from the University of Pittsburgh. She is excited to work with Dr. Rachel Nethery and Dr. Kate Hu this semester to investigate the association between flood exposures and hospitalization.
Katherine Burrows
Kate’s website