A note from the authors: Some of the information and instructions in this book are now out of date because of changes to Hugo and the blogdown package. If you have suggestions for improving this book, please file an issue in our GitHub repository. Thanks for your patience while we work to update the book, and please stay tuned for the revised version!
In the meantime, you can find an introduction to the changes and new features in the v1.0 release blog post and this "Up & running with blogdown in 2021" blog post.
— Yihui, Amber, & Alison
Alison Presmanes Hill
Alison (https://alison.rbind.io) is a professor of pediatrics at Oregon Health and Science University’s (OHSU) Center for Spoken Language Understanding in Portland, Oregon. Alison earned her PhD in developmental psychology with a concentration in quantitative methods from Vanderbilt University in 2008. Her current research focuses on developing better outcome measures to evaluate the impact of new treatments for children with autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders, using natural language processing and other computational methods. Alison is the author of numerous journal articles and book chapters, and her work has been funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Oregon Clinical and Translational Research Institute, and Autism Speaks.
In addition to research, Alison teaches graduate-level courses in OHSU’s Computer Science program (https://www.ohsu.edu/csee) on statistics, data science, and data visualization using R. She has also developed and led several R workshops and smaller team-based training sessions, and loves to train new “useRs.” You can find some of her workshop and teaching materials on GitHub (https://github.com/apreshill) and, of course, on her blogdown site.
Being a new mom, Alison’s current favorite books are The Circus Ship and Bats at the Ballgame. She also does rousing renditions of most Emily Arrow songs (for private audiences only).