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JASA

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JASA
NameJASA
TypeLearned society
Founded19XX
HeadquartersCity, Country
MembershipProfessionals and academics
Leader titlePresident
Leader nameName

JASA JASA is an international professional society focused on statistical science, applied statistics, and related methodologies. It serves as a hub for researchers, educators, practitioners, and policy advisors from institutions such as Harvard University, Stanford University, University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology to exchange research, standards, and best practices. The organization connects members across networks including American Statistical Association, Royal Statistical Society, Institute of Mathematical Statistics, International Biometric Society, and European Statistical Society.

Overview

JASA promotes developments in statistical theory and application through journals, conferences, working groups, and educational initiatives that engage contributors from Princeton University, Columbia University, University of Chicago, University of Pennsylvania, and Yale University. It emphasizes peer-reviewed research that intersects with fields represented at National Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation, World Health Organization, United Nations, and European Commission. Core activities include organizing symposia inspired by themes familiar to participants from Johns Hopkins University, UCLA, Duke University, Imperial College London, and ETH Zurich.

History

Founded by academics and practitioners with ties to Bell Labs, AT&T, IBM Research, Microsoft Research, and Bell Telephone Laboratories, the society drew early members from institutions such as University of California, Berkeley, Carnegie Mellon University, University of Michigan, Cornell University, and University of Toronto. Landmark meetings referenced figures associated with Nobel Prize laureates and awardees from Royal Society, National Academy of Sciences, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and Royal Statistical Society events. Over time, collaborations expanded to include participants affiliated with Oxford University Press, Cambridge University Press, Wiley, Springer Nature, and Elsevier.

Publications and Conferences

The society publishes flagship journals and conference proceedings read by scholars at King's College London, McGill University, University of British Columbia, Monash University, and University of Melbourne. Regular meetings mirror structures used by International Conference on Machine Learning, NeurIPS, Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems, Joint Statistical Meetings, and Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics gatherings. The publications often cite work from investigators at Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit, Sanger Institute, Broad Institute, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Special issues and invited sessions have featured research from teams at Facebook AI Research, Google DeepMind, Amazon Web Services, OpenAI, and IBM Watson.

Membership and Organization

Membership comprises academics from Rutgers University, Northwestern University, University of Washington, University of Texas at Austin, and Peking University as well as industry professionals from Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, Bloomberg LP, and SAS Institute. The governance model includes elected officers, an executive board, and standing committees similar to structures at American Statistical Association, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Association for Computing Machinery, Royal Statistical Society, and International Biometric Society. Regional chapters and student sections maintain active collaborations with groups at Beijing Normal University, University of Hong Kong, Seoul National University, National University of Singapore, and Indian Statistical Institute.

Impact and Recognition

Work disseminated by the society has influenced methodologies used in projects at NASA, European Space Agency, CERN, Large Hadron Collider, and Human Genome Project. Recognition of members includes awards and honors from Nobel Prize, Fields Medal-adjacent communities, and prizes administered by National Academy of Sciences, Royal Society, American Mathematical Society, Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, and Royal Statistical Society. Alumni and fellows have taken leadership positions at White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, European Commission Directorate-General for Research and Innovation, World Bank, International Monetary Fund, and Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.

Criticism and Controversies

Critiques have been raised about the society's relationships with corporate sponsors such as Google, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, Amazon, and Palantir Technologies, echoing debates previously seen around Stanford University partnerships and ethics discussions at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Debates also focused on reproducibility issues highlighted in work from researchers at Reproducibility Project, and on diversity and inclusion challenges paralleling controversies at National Institutes of Health, Wellcome Trust, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and major academic publishers including Elsevier and Springer Nature. Policy disputes have involved stakeholders from European Commission, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office for Human Research Protections, UNESCO, and Council of Europe.

Category:Learned societies