Jean D. Gibbons


Jean Dickinson Gibbons is an American statistician, an expert in nonparametric statistics and an author of books on statistics. She was the first chair of the Committee on Women in Statistics of the American Statistical Association, and the Jean Dickinson Gibbons Graduate Program in Statistics at Virginia Tech is named for her.

Life

Despite her parents' expectations that she become a nurse or teacher,
Gibbons graduated magna cum laude in mathematics in 1958 from Duke University, and continued at Duke for a master's degree,
with a master's thesis on Judgments Concerning Applications of Measures of Central Tendency.
She went on to do graduate study at Columbia University,
but completed her PhD in 1962 from Virginia Tech.
Her dissertation was The Small-Sample Power of some Nonparametric Tests.
After teaching at Mercer University and the University of Cincinnati, she was hired by the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania in 1963. She followed her husband to the University of Alabama,
where she remained despite separating from him and remarrying, until her early retirement in 1995 at age 57.

Books

Gibbons is the author of ten books. They include:
Gibbons became a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 1972, becoming "probably the youngest female ever elected as a fellow".
In 2015, the graduate program in statistics at Virginia Tech was named in her honor.