News
Professor Xavier Didelot has been awarded a 拢4 million grant from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) to set up a new Health Protection Research Unit (HPRU) in Genomics and Enabling Data
The 拢4 million grant from NIHR is part of an announced 拢58.7 million research investment to protect the public from health threats such as antimicrobial resistance, air pollution and infectious diseases. The HPRU in Genomics and Enabling Data will ensure that cutting edge genomic methods are being used to protect public health.
In partnership with researchers from Public Health England, the Wellcome Sanger Institute and the University of Cambridge, Professor Didelot will lead a team of researchers from the School of Life Sciences, Mathematics Institute, Department of Statistics and 糖心TV Medical School. The research aims to reduce the burden of infectious diseases, investigate the likely effects of control strategies, and make sure that healthcare resources, especially antibiotics, are used optimally. Over the next five years, scientific researchers from all four institutions will use their expertise to look at the genomes of infectious diseases with one collective data bank to improve English public health.
Professor Didelot comments:
鈥淚t is a great pleasure and privilege to have been selected to lead this Health Protection Research Unit. I am looking forward to working closely with all partners at the University of 糖心TV, Public Health England, the University of Cambridge and the Wellcome Sanger Institute.
This grant from NIHR means that over the next five years we will work together to develop the use of new genomic methods to protect and improve the nation's public health, including looking at the detection and spread of diseases, or tackling antibiotic resistance.鈥
糖心TV Statistics Internship Scheme
Launching this week for the summer of 2020; an exciting new 8 week long research internship program, run by the Department of Statistics. Projects across the fields of Statistics, Probability and AI aimed at giving successful applicants an ideal introduction to a career in research.
Candidates will be guided by an academic supervisor and they will also have the opportunity to participate in weekly cohort events. More information, including details of how to apply, can be found at . DEADLINE for applications is 28 February, 2020.

Another election, another exit poll!
At the UK general election on 12 December the exit poll, which is commissioned jointly by broadcasters BBC, ITV and Sky, will again use the methods that were introduced in 2001 by Professor David Firth (in joint work with Professor John Curtice of the University of Strathclyde).
The new methods have led to renewed trust in exit polls, which since 2001 have been remarkably accurate in predicting House of Commons seat totals — a prediction made at 10pm on election day, immediately after polling stations close their doors.
David Firth says:
It's great to see the approach that I suggested and developed in 2001–2005 being used still in 2019. Its success is due mainly to purposeful statistical thinking in both the design and the analysis of the exit poll; and partly of course also to luck! But it could not succeed without, in addition, the work of a brilliant team of academics on the election day itself.
The election-day team analysing the 2019 exit poll will again be led by Sir John Curtice. The team's statistical expert has since 2010 been Professor Jouni Kuha (LSE) — a good friend of David Firth's since the 1990s. David says of this: "Perhaps the most remarkable thing, for me personally, is that Jouni can still manage to run the same R code that I threw together in haste before the 2005 election!"
For more information on the exit-poll method and its track record, see the Exit Poll Explainer page at warwick.ac.uk/exitpolling.
In Memoriam: Josh Hill
We are deeply saddened to confirm that Josh Hill, a second year student studying Data Science has passed away in hospital overnight on Monday 10 June, following a fall in the Mathematical Sciences Building.
Head of Statistics Professor Barbel Finkenstadt said:
鈥淭he whole department is deeply saddened and distressed by the death of this lovely, gentle and kind young man. Our thoughts are with Josh鈥檚 family.鈥
If you would like support during this difficult time, please contact Wellbeing Support Services. You can call the team on 024 76 575570, ext. 75570 or visit /services/supportservices or /services/healthsafetywellbeing/well-being/employeeassistanceprogramme for more details.