Julie M. Legler is an American biostatistician and statistics educator. She is a professor of statistics at St. Olaf College.[1]
Legler did her undergraduate studies at the University of Minnesota, and continued there for a master's degree.[2] As a doctoral student in biostatistics at Harvard University, she became one of the early recipients of the Gertrude Cox Scholarship of the American Statistical Association's Committee on Women in Statistics.[3] Her 1993 dissertation, supervised by Louise M. Ryan, was Statistical Analysis for Multiple Binary Outcomes: The Analysis of Birth Defects Data.[4]
After working for seven years in the National Cancer Institute at the National Institutes of Health,[2] she moved to St. Olaf, a small liberal arts college that attracted her with its enthusiastic students and low-pressure atmosphere.[5]At St. Olaf, she has directed the statistics program and headed the Center for Interdisciplinary Research,[1] a program that finds projects in other disciplines to which statistics students can contribute.[5]She has also directed the St. Olaf program for Collaborative Undergraduate Research and Inquiry.[2]Legler chaired the Joint Committee on Undergraduate Statistics of the American Statistical Association and Mathematical Association of America in 2009.
She is one of eight co-authors of the textbook STAT2: Building Models for a World of Data (Macmillan, 2013).[2]
In 2013, Legler was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association.[6]