Julian Higgins
Julian P. T. Higgins is a British biostatistician, Professor of Evidence Synthesis and Director of Research at the Department of Population Health Sciences at the University of Bristol.[1] Higgins was previously Chair in Evidence Synthesis at the University of York, and Programme Leader at the MRC Biostatistics Unit in Cambridge. He is also a founding trustee and a Past-President of the Society for Research Synthesis Methodology.[2]
Julian P.T. Higgins | |
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Born | Julian Piers Thomas Higgins |
Nationality | British |
Education | Durham University, University of Cambridge, and The University of Reading |
Known for | Meta-analysis |
Awards | Cochrane Collaboration's Thomas C. Chalmers Award; Society for Research Synthesis Methodology's Ingram Olkin Award for distinguished lifetime achievement in research synthesis methodology; the Campbell Collaboration's Frederick Mosteller Award for Distinctive Contributions to Systematic Reviewing |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Biostatistics |
Institutions | Imperial College London University College London University of York Medical Research Council University of Bristol |
Thesis | Exploiting information in random effects meta-analysis (1997) |
Early life and education
Higgins was born in North Yorkshire, where he attended the Stokesley School. He completed his undergraduate studies in mathematics at Durham University in 1992, earned a diploma in mathematical statistics from the University of Cambridge in 1993, and obtained a PhD in applied statistics from the University of Reading in 1997.[3]
Academic career
Higgins is a Senior Investigator at the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR). An expert on meta-analysis and systematic review methodologies, Professor Higgins contributes actively to the Cochrane Collaboration, where he also serves as Senior Methods Advisor. He is a co-editor of the Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions and has been named an ISI Highly Cited researcher each year since 2015.[4]
On 28 August 2019 Higgins, along with Jonathan Sterne, Jelena Savović, and colleagues, published in The British Medical Journal an article detailing "RoB 2", a revised tool for assessing risk of bias in randomized trials. [5] Assessing risk of bias is regarded as an essential component of a systematic review. The most commonly used tool for assessing risk of bias to date has been the Cochrane risk-of-bias tool, which Professor Higgins introduced in 2008.[6] Higgins is the most cited author of The British Medical Journal.[7]
References
- Bristol, University of. "Professor Julian Higgins". www.bristol.ac.uk. Retrieved 2018-07-04.
- "Officers". Retrieved 2018-07-04.
- Higgins, JPT. (1997). Exploiting Information in Random Effects Meta-analysis (PhD). University of Reading.
- Bristol, University of. "Professor Julian Higgins". www.bristol.ac.uk. Retrieved 2018-06-03.
- Sterne Jonathan A C, Savović Jelena, Page Matthew J, Elbers Roy G, Blencowe Natalie S, Boutron Isabelle et al. RoB 2: a revised tool for assessing risk of bias in randomised trials BMJ 2019; 366 :l4898.
- Higgins JPT, Green S (editors). Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions Version 5.1.0 [updated March 2011]. The Cochrane Collaboration, 2011. Available from www.handbook.cochrane.org.
- "Julian Higgins publication rankings". Retrieved 2022-05-20.