Vanja Dukic


Vanja Dukic is an expert in computational statistics and mathematical epidemiology. She is a professor of applied mathematics and courtesy professor of economics at the University of Colorado Boulder.
Her research focuses on computational statistics and Bayesian modeling and inference, and includes applications to disease ecology and public health, computational epidemiology work on using internet search engine access patterns to track disease spread, the effects of climate change on the spread of diseases, and risk and insurance.
Her research has been funded by the National Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation, Environmental Protection Agency, National Institute of Food and Agriculture, and, and she has been an invited speaker at over 100 national and international conferences.
Dukic has held several professional positions on editorial boards, including serving as an associate editor for the Journal of the American Statistical Association, ', and Statistica Sinica, and as the statistical advisor to the editorial board of '. She has also served on the Board of Directors of the and the Scientific Advisory Board for the Institute for Computational and Experimental Research in Mathematics. She chaired the Bayesian program at the Joint Statistical Meetings and the ISBA Program Council.
Dukic is also active in the industry, having served as Amazon Scholar, Senior Technical Fellow at, a marketing science company, and Boulder Computational Solutions, Inc., a CU Boulder startup.
Dukic earned a bachelor's degree in finance and actuarial mathematics from Bryant University in 1995. She completed her doctorate in applied mathematics at Brown University in 2001. She worked as a postdoctoral fellow in the, and a tenured faculty member in the of the Department of Public Health Sciences at the University of Chicago, before moving to Colorado. She has also held visiting positions at the University of Turin,, and in Turin, Italy, as well as the Statistical and Applied Mathematical Sciences Institute.

Honors and recognition