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I almost didn’t see it. On the library bookshelf, wedged between heftier hardback tomes, was a little paperback booklet titled How to Test Normality and Other Distributional Assumptions, by Samuel S. Shapiro. It was so thin that the title didn’t fit on the book’s spine.  Nevertheless, I picked it up, thumbed through it, and immediately wished I had found this book ten years ago. [more]


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I recently started reading Richard Muller's book, Physics for Future Presidents, and it made wonder what statisticians would include in a book of statistics for future presidents. Please let me know your thoughts in the comments space of this blog entry or by emailing me: pierson@amstat.org. [more]

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The “...aftermath” column in the November 2011 issue of the MAA’s “Math Horizons” perfectly embodies The Big Mistake that some mathematicians commit when they teach introductory statistics courses: thinking of stat as a branch of math, teaching stat as though it were math, and seeing in stat only the math that's used.  You can check out the full text at [more]


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I’ve recently been using statistical programming recently to analyze … statistical programming!

I thought I’d share a couple of thoughts on this topic.

The Unix server which handles statistical programming where I work is used by dozens of programmers, analysts and statisticians. Throughout the course of a normal day, there are occasions of slow processing times. At least, that’s the perception I have. [more]


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I love to write programs. Statistical programming is my job, but for my blog I write programs for fun.

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Congress appears poised to send its first set of fiscal year 2012 (FY12) appropriations bills to the President for his signature this weekend. Combining the appropriations bills for Agriculture/FDA, Commerce/Justice/Science (CJS) and Transportation/ Housing and Urban Development, the so-called minibus contains the final levels for NSF, Census, BEA, BJS, BTS, ERS and NASS. [more]

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