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  • Broschiertes Buch

"Fitting Equations to Data" - ein Klassiker der Datenverarbeitung und -analyse! Diese überarbeitete, aktualisierte und stark erweiterte 2. Auflage berücksichtigt auch modernste Ansätze (unter anderem Komponenten- und Komponenten/Residuen-Plots). Nebenbei erfährt man, wie der Computer schrittweise Einzug in die Datenverarbeitung gehalten hat. Abgerundet wird das praxiserprobte Werk durch ein ausführliches Glossar. Helps any serious data analyst with a computer to recognize the strengths and limitations of data, to test the assumptions implicit in the least squares methods used to fit the data,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"Fitting Equations to Data" - ein Klassiker der Datenverarbeitung und -analyse! Diese überarbeitete, aktualisierte und stark erweiterte 2. Auflage berücksichtigt auch modernste Ansätze (unter anderem Komponenten- und Komponenten/Residuen-Plots). Nebenbei erfährt man, wie der Computer schrittweise Einzug in die Datenverarbeitung gehalten hat. Abgerundet wird das praxiserprobte Werk durch ein ausführliches Glossar. Helps any serious data analyst with a computer to recognize the strengths and limitations of data, to test the assumptions implicit in the least squares methods used to fit the data, to select appropriate forms of the variables, to judge which combinations of variables are most influential, and to state the conditions under which the fitted equations are applicable. This edition includes numerous extensions and new devices such as component and component-plus-residual plots, cross verification with a second sample, and an index of required x-precision; also, the search for better subset equations is enlarged to cover 262.144 alternatives. The methods described have been applied in agricultural, environmental, management, marketing, medical, physical, and social sciences.
Autorenporträt
Cuthbert Daniel, Consultant in Engineering Statistics, earned his B.S. and M.S. degrees in Chemical Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, studying further at the University of Berlin in 1928 and at Harvard University, 1930-31. He has taught courses in design of experiments and industrial statistics at Columbia University and at the University of California, Berkeley. In the mid-40's he worked as a Statistician at the Gaseous Diffusion Plant, Manhattan Project, Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Mr. Daniel has served as a consultant in statistics to the Research and Development Departments of several large corporations, including Procter and Gamble, United States Steel, General Foods, Interchemical, Standard Oil, and Okonite. Mr. Daniel has been a consultant on design of experiments and analysis of engineering data to the Office of Air Polution, and to the Consumers Union. He was a member of Cancer Clinical Investigations Review Committee of NCI, and of NAS/NRC Committee on National Statistics. He is author of Fitting Equations to Data: Computer Analysis of Multifactor Data for Scientists And Engineers, published by Wiley-Interscience in 1971.
Rezensionen
"...a grand historical document for industrial statistics in its glory days, as its selection for the Classics Library implies." --Technometrics Vol. 42, No. 4 May 2001
This book provides an excellent insight into the minds of two master craftsmen at work. I very much applaud the decision to include this in a "classics library" and would encourage more authors to produce statistics books in the same vein, i.e. focused on the practical application of the subject rather than methodology development. Anyone involved in the analysis of unbalanced multifactor dtaa will find this book an extremely useful source of practical advice. --The Statistician 50 (1) 2001.