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Book Cover for: The Seven Pillars of Statistical Wisdom, Stephen M. Stigler

The Seven Pillars of Statistical Wisdom

Stephen M. Stigler

What gives statistics its unity as a science? Stephen Stigler sets forth the seven foundational ideas of statistics--a scientific discipline related to but distinct from mathematics and computer science.

Even the most basic idea--aggregation, exemplified by averaging--is counterintuitive. It allows one to gain information by discarding information, namely, the individuality of the observations. Stigler's second pillar, information measurement, challenges the importance of "big data" by noting that observations are not all equally important: the amount of information in a data set is often proportional to only the square root of the number of observations, not the absolute number. The third idea is likelihood, the calibration of inferences with the use of probability. Intercomparison is the principle that statistical comparisons do not need to be made with respect to an external standard. The fifth pillar is regression, both a paradox (tall parents on average produce shorter children; tall children on average have shorter parents) and the basis of inference, including Bayesian inference and causal reasoning. The sixth concept captures the importance of experimental design--for example, by recognizing the gains to be had from a combinatorial approach with rigorous randomization. The seventh idea is the residual: the notion that a complicated phenomenon can be simplified by subtracting the effect of known causes, leaving a residual phenomenon that can be explained more easily.

The Seven Pillars of Statistical Wisdom presents an original, unified account of statistical science that will fascinate the interested layperson and engage the professional statistician.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publish Date: Mar 7th, 2016
  • Pages: 240
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 5.40in - 6.90in - 0.70in - 0.55lb
  • EAN: 9780674088917
  • Categories: Probability & Statistics - GeneralHistory & PhilosophyMethodology

About the Author

Stigler, Stephen M.: - Stephen M. Stigler is Ernest DeWitt Burton Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus in the Department of Statistics at the University of Chicago.

Praise for this book

Distilled from centuries of statistical research and garnished with wit, this masterfully prepared seven-course food for thought is a real treat for anyone who wants to reason with data, big or small.--Xiao-Li Meng, Harvard University
Statistics has a core set of ideas that touch every aspect of our lives. Stigler has tapped into these and brought them to life.--Persi Diaconis, Stanford University
The hardest kind of scientific thinking concerns what's in a field's basement--and Stigler has brought a bright flashlight to his subterranean investigations of the ever-more-influential field of statistics.--Bradley Efron, Stanford University
This lively account of a radically counter-intuitive past at least encourages us to question big data's reputation. Never entrust measurement to a monarch--or judgment to a computer.--Jonathon Keats "New Scientist" (5/21/2016 12:00:00 AM)
Wonderful...Each of the seven pillars that Stigler, in his wisdom, has hewn from the past two centuries of statistical thought provides surprising insights.--Howard Wainer "Science" (5/13/2016 12:00:00 AM)
Learning to reason statistically helps to make one a clearer and more logical thinker about important issues in the world. Part of the achievement of this book is that it makes some of this available to the general reader without the necessity of having to delve into more technical aspects of the subject.--Michael J. Evans "Mathematical Reviews (starred review)" (3/3/2018 12:00:00 AM)