Model Building, Biomathematics, Quality Control
B.S.Ch.E. (1960) Vanderbilt University
M.A. (1963) Ph. D. (1965) Princeton University
Early in the AIDS epidemic, Professor Thompson's model of the epidemic indicated that America's lack of public health intervention in shutting down businesses that facilitated high-frequency gay sex would result in the much higher AIDS rates now encountered in the U.S. compared with those in other First World countries.
Professor Thompson works with companies in both Texas and Poland in the implementation of statistical process control using the paradigm of Deming. In 1991-92, he obtained United Nations funding for the creation of a quality control task force of 12 Polish Ph.D.'s to implement SPC in Poland.
Professor Thompson is a Fellow of the American Statistical Association, the Institute of Mathematical Statistics, and the International Statistical Institute. He received the ASA Owen Award in 1985 and the Wilks Medal in 1991. He has authored or coauthored eight books concerned with various aspects of modeling, including Nonparametric Probability Density Estimation (Johns Hopkins, 1978), Cancer Modeling (Dekker, 1987), Empirical Model Building (John Wiley & Sons, 1989), Nonparametric Function Estimation, Modeling and Simulation (SIAM, 1991), Statistical Process Control for Quality Improvement (Chapman & Hall, 1993), Statystyczne Sterowanie Procesem: Metoda Deminga Etapowej jackosci (Akademicka Oficyna Wydawnicza PLJ, 1994), The Economics of Production and Productivity: A Modeling Approach (Capital, 1996), and Entrepreneurship and Productivity (University Press of America, 1998).
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