History
The International
Workshop on Statistical Modelling has been held in Europe and
the USA for the past 14 years. The workshop arose out of two GLIM
conferences in the U.K. in London (1982) and Lancaster (1985),
and from a number of short courses organised by Murray Aitkin
and held at Lancaster in the early 1980s, which attracted many
European statisticians interested in Generalised Linear Modelling.
At this time, a group of Austrian, Italian and British statisticians
saw both the opportunity and the need for a regular meeting of
Europeans that would focus on various aspects of statistical modelling
in an informal workshop environment, specifically aimed at applied
statistics, but also including theoretical developments and computational
methods.
The spirit
of the workshop has always concentrated on papers that are both
motivated by real life data and also which make novel contributions
to the subject. Statistical modelling is an important cornerstone
in many scientific disciplines, and the workshop has consistently
provided a rich environment for cross-fertilization of ideas from
different statistical disciplines. The workshop has brought together
scientists from different nationalities with different backgrounds
and experience, and has thus always promoted contributions from
students early in their careers and allowed time for discussion
and interchange between junior and senior scientists.
The inaugural
workshop in this series took place in Innsbruck in 1986, and brought
together a small but enthusiastic group of thirty European statisticians
interested in statistical modelling. The programme concentrated
on GLMs and was characterised by a number of features - a friendly
and supportive academic atmosphere, tutorial sessions and invited
speakers presenting new developments in statistical modelling,
and a very well organised social programme. The academic programme
allowed plenty of time for presentation and for discussion, and
made available copies of all papers beforehand.
Since this
first meeting, the workshop has grown substantially, and now regularly
attracts over 150 participants. There has been a strong effort
made to bring each new meeting to a different European country.
The scope of the workshop is now much broader, reflecting the
growth in the subject of statistical modelling over ten years.
The elements of the first workshop, however, are still present,
and participants always find the meetings relevant and stimulating.
The number of submitted papers has grown with the number of participants,
but successful contributed papers still receive a relatively generous
30 minutes of presentation time, and invited speakers one hour.
Parallel sessions have been avoided, allowing everyone both to
learn and to contribute. Poster sessions are now held, and software
demonstrations and displays are organised. One change is that
the workshops have become more international in nature. Participants
now attend from all corners of the globe, and workshops have travelled
around Europe - to Perugia (1987), Vienna (1988), Trento (1989),
Toulouse (1990), Utrecht (1991), Munich (1992), Leuven (1993),
Exeter (1994), Innsbruck (1995), Orvieto (1996),and Biel/Bienne
(1997) - to the USA - New Orleans (1998) - and back to Europe
- Graz (1999) Bilbao (2000), Odense (2001), Chania (2003), Leuven
(2003), Florence (2004). The year 2005 will take the workshop
to Australia.