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Breakthroughs in Statistics: Volume 1: Foundations and Basic Theory (Springer Series in Statistics / Perspectives in Statistics) (Springer Series in Statistics / Perspectives in Statistics)

Breakthroughs in Statistics: Volume 1: Foundations and Basic Theory (Springer Series in Statistics / Perspectives in Statistics) (Springer Series in Statistics / Perspectives in Statistics)

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Creators: Samuel Kotz, Norman L. Johnson
Publisher: Springer
Category: Book

List Price: $69.95
Buy New: $45.00
You Save: $24.95 (36%)



New (12) Used (8) from $34.75

Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 837599

Media: Paperback
Edition: Corrected
Pages: 680
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.1
Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.1 x 1.5

ISBN: 0387940375
Dewey Decimal Number: 519.5
EAN: 9780387940373

Publication Date: June 11, 1993
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • Breakthroughs in Statistics: Volume 2: Methodology and Distribution (Springer Series in Statistics / Perspectives in Statistics) (Springer Series in Statistics / Perspectives in Statistics)
  • Breakthroughs in Statistics: Volume III (Springer Series in Statistics / Perspectives in Statistics)
  • All of Statistics: A Concise Course in Statistical Inference (Springer Texts in Statistics)
  • The Lady Tasting Tea: How Statistics Revolutionized Science in the Twentieth Century
  • Statistical Inference

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
This is a two volume collection of seminal papers in the statistical sciences written during the past 100 years. These papers have each had an outstanding influence on the development of statistical theory and practice over the last century. Each paper is preceded by an introduction written by an authority in the field providing background information and assessing its influence. Readers will enjoy a fresh outlook on now well-established features of statistical techniques and philosophy by becoming acquainted with the ways they have been developed. It is hoped that some readers will be stimulated to study some of the references provided in the Introductions (and also in the papers themselves) and so attain a deeper background knowledge of the basis of their work.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars the first volume on breakthrough papers that establishes the foundational underpinnings of statistical inference   February 24, 2008
Michael R. Chernick (Holland PA)
27 out of 27 found this review helpful

As a PhD statistician who has published research articles and known some of the great statisticians at Stanford I can say that this is a great collection of the best papers in statistics. The editors Johnson and Kotz first teamed up to write the most thorough and popular books on distributions in statistics. As they became more ambitious they put together the grand opus on statistics, the 9 volume encyclopedia of statistics along with its updated volumes. That Wiley series has now been updated in a second edition. Unfortunately Norman Johnson past away a few years ago and so Sam Kotz has to look to others now to help him with his scholarly works which includes two excellent books on process capability indices.

Statistics is an amazingly young field. Probability theory goes back to the 17th and 18th centuries when famous mathematicians like Pascal, the Bernoulli family, DeMoivre, Bayes,Laplace, Gauss and others. Many motivated by games of chance and in Gauss' case astronomy. But significant advances in the development of statistics can only be traced back to the 19th century and its true birth came in the early 20th century and now in the 21st century it continues to grow.

The editors (Johnson and Kotz) lead us in a series of three volumes through the developments by presenting the works that they and others considered in retrospect to be the "breakthroughs" in the development of statistics. The articles are introduced by a current statistical expert who is very familiar with the article and its connection to the development of a particular research area or branch of statistics. Very good justification for each item is given. My only contention with the series is that there are some papers missing that I think belong. But such is always the case when people get together to rank the best works in almost any endeavor.

This review is about volume 1 which concentrates on the foundations of statistics and the development of the basic theory. Most of this took place between 1890 and 1950 with the likes of Karl Pearson, Francis Galton, Egon Pearson, Jerzy Neyman and most notably Sir Ronald Fisher. The foundations of statistics are still not unified as the Bayesian, Fisherian and frequentist schools of inference all developed in the 20th century and led to controversies among the founders. This book covers all that in a scholarly fashion with the expert introductions and the selected articles.

The first article in the book is Fisher's 1922 paper that is his first account of his foundational theory for statistical inference. It is the place where the concept of maximum likelihood is introduced. Seymour Geisser gives the introduction.

Other breakthrough articles include Hotelling's 1931 article that introduces the multivariate generalization of Student's t distribution, the statistic that we now call Hotelling's T square, Neyman and Pearson's 1933 paper where their theory of hypothesis testing first arose, De Finetti's 1937 paper that helped establish the Bayesian school of inference, Gnedenko's 1943 paper that established the three limiting distribution for the maximum of an independent identically distributed sequence, which dotted the i's and crossed the t's of the earlier work of Fisher and Tippett and others and established extreme value theory as a discipline in statistics, Wald's 1945 paper that made public the secret developments of sequential analysis that he and Barnard developed during World War II and there are many others. Another paper by Wald established statistical decision theory, Jack Kiefer's paper that formalized optimality theory for statistical experimental designs, and the paper by James and Stein that astounded the world of statistics by show the inadmissibility under the quadratic loss function of the maximum likelihood estimator of a multivariate normal mean vector in three or more dimensions. The James and Stein paper in 1961 proved this by construction of an estimator (now called the James-Stein or shrinkage estimator) that shrinks the estimate of the vector toward zero. This estimator dominates the maxumum likelihood estimator over the entire parameter space for the mean vector! Later it was shown to be a Bayes estimator under a normal prior and it relates to the empirical Bayes estimators discussed in another seminal paper by Robbins 1955 that is also included in this volume.

I have omitted discussion fo a number of other articles as a review should give the reader a flavor for the book and not tell the whole story. Any one serious about statistical research or its historical developments and foundational issues should read volume 1.



5 out of 5 stars awesome collection of greatest papers in statistics with precise introductions   September 15, 2005
supercutepig (USA)
19 out of 19 found this review helpful

Knuth said, garbage in garbage out. These three volumes are absolutely treasure of statistics, forever. The excellent papers in the past 110 years are collected and introduced. Whatever for students or researchers, they are definitely valuable to be at hand.

[1] The original papers are attached. Do you remember Abel said, Read the masters', not their pupils'?
[2] For each important paper, there is an introduction written by the real experts of this domain.
[3] This is a real awesome book that leads you to overview the history of statistics.
[4] You can find a surprise of good price somewhere on campusi.com if you need all the three volumes.


 
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