The Collected Works of John W. Tukey


Book Description

This volume of eleven articles compiles important papers by Tukey that examine the intriguing problems inherent in the area of multiple comparisons and provide a useful framework for thinking about them. Each volume in the set is indexed and contains a bibliography.




The Collected Works of John W. Tukey


Book Description

First of an eight-volume set, documenting Tukey's work from the 1940s to the 1980s One of the late 20th Century's leading innovators and influences on data analysis, John W. Tukey's discoveries and methods have greatly impacted the work of statisticians throughout the world. The Collected Works of John W. Tukey begins here, with 14 chapters on time series analysis.







Convergence and Uniformity in Topology. (AM-2), Volume 2


Book Description

The description for this book, Convergence and Uniformity in Topology. (AM-2), Volume 2, will be forthcoming.




The Collected Works of John W. Tukey


Book Description

This volume of eleven articles compiles important papers by Tukey that examine the intriguing problems inherent in the area of multiple comparisons and provide a useful framework for thinking about them. Each volume in the set is indexed and contains a bibliography.




Adventures of a Statistician


Book Description

Meet John W. Tukey, one of the most consequential statisticians and original thinkers of the twentieth century. Growing up one hundred years ago in New Bedford, Massachusetts, a large coastal town primarily known for its commercial fishing and textile industries, John Wilder Tukey quickly showed himself to be a child prodigy. The son of educated parents whose high school classmates voted them most likely to give birth to a genius, he learned to read on his own by three years of age, mastered using a hand-crack desk calculator to speed up arithmetical calculations shortly thereafter, and was poring through technical journals in the New Bedford Free Public Library by the time he was a teenager. Homeschooled until being admitted to Brown University, Tukey majored in chemistry there--even as he spent countless hours in the university library compiling lists of statistical techniques on index cards, simply because he found them interesting and useful. With multiple degrees in hand, Tukey's next stop was Princeton University, where his interests shifted to mathematics. After earning a doctorate in topology, an especially abstract branch of mathematics, Princeton retained him as a lecturer. But with the United States poised to enter World War II, Tukey joined the Fire Control Research Office (FCRO), where he was exposed to a set of life-and-death problems that bore little resemblance to abstract mathematics: namely, calculating the trajectories of artillery and ballistics and the motions of rocket powder, working with stereoscopic height and range finders, and improving the Boeing B-29 Superfortress bomber. With the stakes never higher, a chance encounter during the war with a fellow polymath and unconventional thinker twenty years his senior set the course for the rest of Tukey's professional life--as well as changing the field of statistics forever. In "Adventures of a Statistician," author Mark Jones Lorenzo chronicles John Tukey's life and times, from his decades spent at Princeton as a teacher and administrator and also at AT&T's Bell Laboratories as a scientific generalist; to his development of the fast Fourier transform (FFT) algorithm, which launched a revolution in digital signal processing; to his innovative ideas in displaying and summarizing data, such as with the intuitive stem-and-leaf plot and the interactive graphics of the PRIM-9 computer system; to his creation of exploratory data analysis, an approach to performing statistics he equated with "detective work"; to his intellectual war with sex researcher Alfred Kinsey over appropriate kinds of statistical sampling; to his productive yet sometimes strained relationships with fellow statisticians such as Ronald Fisher, George Box, and Erich Lehmann; to his enlightening friendship with the legendary physicist Richard Feynman; to his mentoring of dozens of doctoral students, many of whom went on to have highly successful careers in their own right; to his inventive use of language, having coined words like "bit"; to his development of sophisticated mathematical methods to detect underground nuclear explosions; to his groundbreaking work on the jackknife, multiple comparisons, robustness, and many other statistical techniques; and to his accomplishments in health and environmental regulation, U.S. census analysis, election forecasting, and public policy, among a host of other significant and impactful achievements. Nearly a decade in the making, "Adventures of a Statistician" is more than just the complete biography of John W. Tukey, perhaps the most revolutionary applied statistician of the past century. It's also a fascinating intellectual journey through the recent history of statistics as well.




The Collected Works of John W. Tukey


Book Description

This book includes a collection of John W. Tukey's papers that demonstrate a number of numerical methods and graphical methods, such as box plots, stem-and-leaf diagrams, and point cloud rotation, for graphics and exploratory data analysis.




The Collected Works of John W. Tukey


Book Description

These papers illustrate important features characteristic of John Tukey's work, namely the desire to look beyond or beneath conventional set structures, the wish to detect and deal with anomalous behavior, and great technical ingenuity.







Graphical Analysis of Multi-Response Data


Book Description

A comprehensive summary of new and existing approaches to analyzing multiresponse data, Graphical Analysis of Multiresponse Data emphasizes graphical procedures. These procedures are then used, in various ways, to analyze, summarize, and present data from a specific, well-known plant breeding trial. These procedures result in overlap plots, their corresponding semigraphical tables, scatter plot matrices, profiles across environments and attributes for individual genotypes and groups of genotypes, and principal components. The interpretation of these displays, as an aid to understanding, is illustrated and discussed. Techniques for choosing expressions for the observed quantities are also emphasized. Graphical Analysis of Multiresponse Data is arranged into three parts: What can usefully be done Consequences for the example Approaches and choices in more detail That structure enables the reader to obtain an overview of what can be found, and to then delve into various aspects more deeply if desired. Statisticians, data analysts, biometricians, plant breeders, behavioral scientists, social scientists, and engineering scientists will find Graphical Analysis of Multiresponse Data offers invaluable assistance. Its details are also of interest to scientists in private firms, government institutions, and research organizations who are concerned with the analysis and interpretation of experimental multiresponse data.