
Battelle and Ohio State University Partner on New-Tech Bayesian Modeling
A shared belief in the value of collaborative research
has energized a new partnership between Battelles
Measurement and Data Analysis Sciences (MDAS)
Product Line and the Spatial Statistics and Environmental
Sciences (SSES) Program, Department of Statistics, at
The Ohio State University (OSU). Participants have
shared recent environmental research through presentations
and technical discussions during the fall 2002-winter
2003 academic quarters. Analysis of remote sensing
(satellite) data, physical-statistical modeling, and combining
monitoring data with model predictions were among
the topics. This spring, participants will identify opportunities
for collaborative research.
Interest in the power and flexibility of hierarchical
Bayesian modeling (HBM), an emerging decisionmaking
and information-synthesis technology, is a central
theme of the collaboration. While HBM is not new, only
in recent years has it emerged as a practical solution to an
array of problems. Its power lies in its probabilistic
approach of breaking highly complex, multi-dimensional
relationships into conceptually simpler and logically
intuitive hierarchies. HBMs flexibility results from its
ability to incorporate all available information (data),
including but not limited to, qualitative scientific knowledge,
disparate data structures, and multiple data sources.
Another strength is HBMs accurate characterization of
uncertainty, which in turn supports more informed
decision-making. As additional information becomes
available, this tool facilitates increasingly improved
decision-making over time.
HBM technology is not limited to environmental
settings. A recent MSNŽ article (http://msn.com.com/
2100-1104-984921.html) suggests that HBMs are integral
to the data-search and information-retrieval technologies
of companies such as Google and Autonomy. HBMs are
also used . . . to determine correlations between specific
symptoms and diseases, create personal robots, and
develop artificially intelligent devices that think by doing
what data and experience tell them to do. Microsoft has
already incorporated HBM into several existing applications
and plans to embed this technology in future
software that lets communication devices automatically
filter messages and derive strategies for reaching people.
Later this year, Intel intends to provide a tool for constructing
HBMs. One existing application involves
cameras that warn doctors if patients are at near-term
risk of suffering a stroke.
Over the past three years, Battelles MDAS Product
Line has developed capability and experience in HBM
through EPA project support, internally funded research,
and the recent hire of Dr. Christopher Holloman, an
experienced HBM practitioner. Participating OSU
faculty membersDr. Noel Cressie, Director of the
SSES Program, Dr. L. Mark Berliner, and Dr. Tom
Santnerare nationally recognized for scientific contributions
in this area.
For more information, contact Dr. Steven Bortnick at
(614) 424-7487, bortnick@battelle.org.
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