The following pages link to Stephen M. Stigler (Q251609):
Displayed 50 items.
- Isaac Newton as a probabilist (Q449738) (← links)
- The epic story of maximum likelihood (Q449800) (← links)
- The William Kruskal legacy: 1919-2005 (Q449868) (← links)
- William Kruskal remembered (Q449878) (← links)
- Richard Price, the first Bayesian (Q667686) (← links)
- Karl Pearson's theoretical errors and the advances they inspired (Q900464) (← links)
- The Bernoullis of Basel (Q1126457) (← links)
- An Edgeworth curiosum (Q1153627) (← links)
- Gauss and the invention of least squares (Q1161001) (← links)
- Poisson on the Poisson distribution (Q1170815) (← links)
- The anonymous professor Gergonne (Q1228473) (← links)
- An attack on Gauss, published by Legendre in 1820 (Q1239146) (← links)
- Mathematical statistics in the early states (Q1244761) (← links)
- Do robust estimators work with real data? (Q1244958) (← links)
- Item:Q251609 (redirect page) (← links)
- The missing early history of contingency tables (Q1432078) (← links)
- Francis Galton's account of the invention of correlation (Q1595990) (← links)
- The 1988 Neyman Memorial Lecture: A Galtonian perspective on shrinkage estimators (Q1596006) (← links)
- Stochastic simulation in the nineteenth century (Q1596032) (← links)
- The history of statistics in 1933 (Q1596123) (← links)
- Gergonne's 1815 paper on the design and analysis of polynomial regression experiments (Q1844809) (← links)
- Linear functions of order statistics with smooth weight functions (Q1845589) (← links)
- Discussion of: Statistical analysis of an archeological find (Q2482966) (← links)
- Fisher in 1921 (Q2503967) (← links)
- The asymptotic distribution of the trimmed mean (Q2560685) (← links)
- (Q2820072) (← links)
- (Q2845913) (← links)
- (Q3173637) (← links)
- Studies in the history of probability and statistics XL Boscovich, Simpson and a 1760 manuscript note on fitting a linear relation (Q3218903) (← links)
- Studies in the history of probability and statistics, L: Karl Pearson and the Rule of Three (Q3224211) (← links)
- Who Discovered Bayes's Theorem? (Q3322992) (← links)
- How Ronald Fisher became a mathematical statistician (Q3605591) (← links)
- Estimating Serial Correlation by Visual Inspection of Diagnostic Plots (Q3740080) (← links)
- (Q3803965) (← links)
- The Dark Ages of Probability in England: The Seventeenth Century Work of Richard Cumberland and Thomas Strode (Q3814461) (← links)
- (Q3836832) (← links)
- (Q3859091) (← links)
- Francis Ysidro Edgeworth, Statistician (Q3867796) (← links)
- (Q3893104) (← links)
- Thomas Bayes's Bayesian Inference (Q3949789) (← links)
- Studies in the history of probability and statistics XLIII Karl Pearson and quasi-independence (Q4015816) (← links)
- (Q4074841) (← links)
- (Q4121297) (← links)
- The Effect of Sample Heterogeneity on Linear Functions of Order Statistics, with Applications to Robust Estimation (Q4131451) (← links)
- Fractional Order Statistics, with Applications (Q4151588) (← links)
- Laplace's Early Work: Chronology and Citations (Q4168902) (← links)
- (Q4355995) (← links)
- The Seven Pillars of Statistical Wisdom (Q4595266) (← links)
- The Problematic Unity of Biometrics* (Q4670395) (← links)
- John Craig and the Probability of History: From the Death of Christ to the Birth of Laplace (Q4727982) (← links)