Miller was born in
Lancaster, Pennsylvania and attended the
Hill School. He entered
Princeton University in 1950, where he was a member of
Phi Beta Kappa and the university's rowing team. He graduated from Princeton with a BSc in mathematics in 1954 and moved to
Stanford University to continue his study. He received his PhD in statistics at Stanford under
Samuel Karlin in 1958. Subsequently, he taught at
University of California, Berkeley briefly before joining the statistics faculty at Stanford University in 1959 as an assistant professor. Miller was promoted to associate professor in 1962 and full professor in 1967. Between 1967 and 1972, he served as an associate editor for the
Journal of the American Statistical Association, and from 1977 to 1979, he held the editor position for the
Annals of Statistics. His students include
Bradley Efron and
Nancy Reid,
Gabrielle Kelly, among others. His entire collection of papers and communications are archived by Stanford University. Miller became a Fellow of the
Institute of Mathematical Statistics in 1968, and the following year, he became a Fellow of the
American Statistical Association. He was the editor-in-chief of the journal
Annals of Statistics between 1977 and 1979. Miller's wife was Barbara J. Bonesteele Miller, an education analyst and a Stanford University alumna. In 1983, Miller was diagnosed with a rare form of
lymphoma and died three years later in 1986 at
Stanford, California. == Bibliography ==