Associate Professor
University of Kentucky / College of Public Health / Department of Biostatistics
Dr. Sergey Tarima is an associate professor in the department of Biostatistics of the University of Kentucky. He holds a PHD equivalent degree in applied mathematics from Tomsk State University and a PhD from the department of Statistics of the University of Kentucky. Previously, he was a faculty in the division of Biostatistics of the Medical College of Wisconsin. He authored dozens of applied and methodological statistical, but most of his peer-reviewed published work is collaborative. He has given many invited talks and presented his research at numerous regional, national, and international conferences. He has served as a Biostistician on many grants funded by NIH, CDC, US ARMY, DOD, Department of Education, and other agencies. His statistical research interest is wide spanning from quintile regression to estimands with the particular interest in the areas of adaptive designs and the use of additional information. The adaptive-design-related manuscripts he published include the paper on of the effect of interim stopping options, blinded and unblinded interim sample size reestimation, and enrichment designs. The majority of Dr. Tarima’s statistical publications, however, are on the use of additional information, where he proposed new methods, compared his methods with competing approaches, and applied his methods in real-life settings.