Press release

The Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters gets new president

Foto: Lars Svankjær / Videnskabernes Selskab
Susanne Ditlevsen, professor of statistics and stochastic models in biology at the Department of Mathematical Sciences, University of Copenhagen was elected president of the Royal Academy for the next four years on Thursday 16 May 2024.

Ditlevsen will be following in the footsteps of individuals such as King Christian VIII and Niels Bohr – and most recently Professor Marie Louise Nosch, Saxo Institute, University of Copenhagen.

“I’m extremely pleased and proud to be the head of such a unique organisation. I will approach the task with the utmost humility and respect for the Royal Academy’s historical legacy,” Ditlevsen explains.

Secretary General Professor Thomas Sinkjær looks forward to working with the new president:

“Susanne was elected with resounding support from Royal Academy members and is an excellent researcher whose abilities I have the greatest of confidence in to continue the positive direction the Royal Academy is headed.”

Ditlevsen has a versatile profile personally and professionally. She applies mathematical models to study a wide array of biological and physical systems, ranging from marine mammals to climate models to the brain’s processing of sensory input. Her research recently made waves nationally and internationally with an article in Nature Communications suggesting that a major ocean current could potentially come to a halt in the middle of this century.

In fact her research career started relatively late. She did not embark on a research career until after studying to be an actor and then working in various theatre companies as an actor and director for ten years.

She believes that the Royal Academy, notwithstanding its 280 year history, is highly justified today:

“More than ever the Royal Academy has an important role to play because science and interdisciplinary understanding are essential to solving society’s major challenges, such as the climate and biodiversity crises, natural disasters, security, wars, health crises, epidemics, food security and humanitarian disasters.”

For inquiries please do not hesitate to contact the Royal Academy’s Head of Communications Kristoffer Frøkjær at or by telephone on +45 3114 6101. 

About Professor Susanne Ditlevsen

 

1999: MSc in mathematics, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Spain

2000: MSc in statistics, University of Copenhagen

2005: PhD in biostatistics, Department of Biostatics, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen

2011: Professor of statistics and stochastic models in biology, Department of Mathematical Sciences, University of Copenhagen

2016: Member of the Royal Academy

 

In addition:

  • Section head of statistics and probability, 11 years
  • Distinguished Investigator Grant in Data Science from the Novo Nordisk Foundation
  • During the COVID-19 crisis she was part of the Ministry of the Interior and Health of Denmark’s early warning system advisory group