Karl Pearson’s Theoretical Errors and the Advances They Inspired
Stigler, Stephen M.
Statist. Sci., Tome 23 (2008) no. 1, p. 261-271 / Harvested from Project Euclid
Karl Pearson played an enormous role in determining the content and organization of statistical research in his day, through his research, his teaching, his establishment of laboratories, and his initiation of a vast publishing program. His technical contributions had initially and continue today to have a profound impact upon the work of both applied and theoretical statisticians, partly through their inadequately acknowledged influence upon Ronald A. Fisher. Particular attention is drawn to two of Pearson’s major errors that nonetheless have left a positive and lasting impression upon the statistical world.
Publié le : 2008-05-15
Classification:  Karl Pearson,  R. A. Fisher,  Chi-square test,  degrees of freedom,  parametric inference,  history of statistics
@article{1219339117,
     author = {Stigler, Stephen M.},
     title = {Karl Pearson's Theoretical Errors and the Advances They Inspired},
     journal = {Statist. Sci.},
     volume = {23},
     number = {1},
     year = {2008},
     pages = { 261-271},
     language = {en},
     url = {http://dml.mathdoc.fr/item/1219339117}
}
Stigler, Stephen M. Karl Pearson’s Theoretical Errors and the Advances They Inspired. Statist. Sci., Tome 23 (2008) no. 1, pp.  261-271. http://gdmltest.u-ga.fr/item/1219339117/