Assistant Professor of Operations Management
Professor Lee's research in operations lies at the intersection of healthcare delivery and statistical learning. His recent papers examine data-intensive approaches for designing pay-for-performance systems in healthcare and for personalizing transplant wait time predictions for patients. He holds degrees in Mathematics from Cambridge University and degrees in Statistics and Operations Research from Stanford University.
Selected Publications
"A K-nearest Neighbors Survival Probability Prediction Method" (with D.J. Lowsky, D.Y. Ding, C.E. McCulloch, L. Ross, J.R. Thistlethwaite and S.A. Zenios)
Statistics in Medicine, forthcoming
"
Interval Estimation of Population Means Under Unknown But Bounded Probabilities of Sample Selection" (with P.M. Aronow),
Biometrika, forthcoming
"An Evidence-based Incentive System for Medicare’s End-Stage Renal Disease Program" (with S.A. Zenios),
Management Science, Vol. 58, No. 6, 1092-1105, 2012
"Re-exploring Differences among For-Profit and Non-Profit Dialysis Providers" (with G.M. Chertow and S.A. Zenios),
Health Services Research, Vol. 45, No. 3, 633-46, 2010
"Optimal Capacity Overbooking for the Regular Treatment of Chronic Conditions" (with S.A. Zenios),
Operations Research, Vol. 57, No. 4, 852-865, 2009
"Alloimmunization to Red Blood Cell Antigens Affects Clinical Outcomes in Liver Transplant Patients" (with S.D. Boyd, F. Stenard, L.T. Goodnough, C.O. Esquivel, and M.J. Fontaine),
Liver Transplantation, Vol. 13, No. 12, 1654-1661, 2007
Education
PhD Stanford University
MS Stanford University
MMath Cambridge University
BA/MA Cambridge University