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Randolph
Tim Randolph, PhD

Tim Randolph, PhD

  • Professor, Clinical Research Division, Fred Hutch
  • Professor, Biostatistics Program, Public Health Sciences Division, Fred Hutch
  • Member, Translational Data Science Integrated Research Center (TDS IRC), Fred Hutch
  • Affiliate Investigator, Translational Science and Therapeutics Division, Fred Hutch
206.667.1079
206.667.7004

Background

Dr. Tim Randolph is a statistician and mathematician who works with clinical research and public health scientists to analyze complex molecular data. For example, patterns of gene expression may be predictive of disease; groups of metabolites may be indicative of a drug’s success; or communities of gut bacteria may be associated with health. Dr. Randolph specializes both in applying appropriate statistical and machine-learning tools — and in developing his own methods — to help researchers understand how these varied types of data, when analyzed together, may reveal additional insights so that inferences can be made about relationships between molecular measurements and health or disease.

Education

PhD, Mathematics, University of Oregon, 1990

BS, Mathematics, University of Puget Sound, 1982

Current Projects

Generalized Matrix Decomposition for microbiome data

Kernel Penalized Regression

PEER (Partially Empirical Eigenvectors for Regression)

TACOMA (Tissue Array Co-Occurrence Matrix Analysis)

Functional principal components (FPC) for longitudinal HIV data and survival analysis

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