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The reader will soon find that this is more than a "how-to-do-it"
book. It describes a philosophical approach to the use of
statistics in the analysis of clinical trials. I have come
gradually to the position described here, but I have not come that
way alone. This approach is heavily influenced by my reading the
papers of R.A. Fisher, F.S. Anscombe, F. Mosteller, and J. Neyman.
But the most important influences have been those of my medical
colleagues, who had important real-life medical questions that
needed to be answered. Statistical methods depend on abstract
mathematical theorems and often complicated algorithms on the
computer. But these are only a means to an end, because in the end
the statistical techniques we apply to clinical studies have to
provide useful answers. When I was studying martingales and
symbolic logic in graduate school, my wife, Fran, had to be left
out of the intellectual excitement. But, as she looked on, she kept
asking me how is this knowledge useful. That question, what can you
do with this? haunted my studies. When I began working in bio
statistics, she continued asking me where it was all going, and I
had to explain what I was doing in terms of the practical problems
that were being ad dressed."
This book explains how the computer programs work and why and when
they can be applied to problems in toxicology. It discusses the
statistical models used and their applications in a general
fashion. The book overviews the problems that can arise from the
blind use of the statistical models.
We live in a world that is not quite "right." The central tenet of
statistical inquiry is that Observation = Truth + Error because
even the most careful of scientific investigations have always been
bedeviled by uncertainty. Our attempts to measure things are
plagued with small errors. Our attempts to understand our world are
blocked by blunders. And, unfortunately, in some cases, people have
been known to lie. In this long-awaited follow-up to his
well-regarded bestseller, The Lady Tasting Tea, David Salsburg
opens a door to the amazing widespread use of statistical methods
by looking at historical examples of errors, blunders and lies from
areas as diverse as archeology, law, economics, medicine,
psychology, sociology, Biblical studies, history, and war-time
espionage. In doing so, he shows how, upon closer statistical
investigation, errors and blunders often lead to useful
information. And how statistical methods have been used to uncover
falsified data. Beginning with Edmund Halley's examination of the
Transit of Venus and ending with a discussion of how many tanks
Rommel had during the Second World War, the author invites the
reader to come along on this easily accessible and fascinating
journey of how to identify the nature of errors, minimize the
effects of blunders, and figure out who the liars are.
This book explains how the computer programs work and why and when
they can be applied to problems in toxicology. It discusses the
statistical models used and their applications in a general
fashion. The book overviews the problems that can arise from the
blind use of the statistical models.
The reader will soon find that this is more than a "how-to-do-it"
book. It describes a philosophical approach to the use of
statistics in the analysis of clinical trials. I have come
gradually to the position described here, but I have not come that
way alone. This approach is heavily influenced by my reading the
papers of R.A. Fisher, F.S. Anscombe, F. Mosteller, and J. Neyman.
But the most important influences have been those of my medical
colleagues, who had important real-life medical questions that
needed to be answered. Statistical methods depend on abstract
mathematical theorems and often complicated algorithms on the
computer. But these are only a means to an end, because in the end
the statistical techniques we apply to clinical studies have to
provide useful answers. When I was studying martingales and
symbolic logic in graduate school, my wife, Fran, had to be left
out of the intellectual excitement. But, as she looked on, she kept
asking me how is this knowledge useful. That question, what can you
do with this? haunted my studies. When I began working in bio
statistics, she continued asking me where it was all going, and I
had to explain what I was doing in terms of the practical problems
that were being ad dressed."
We live in a world that is not quite "right." The central tenet of
statistical inquiry is that Observation = Truth + Error because
even the most careful of scientific investigations have always been
bedeviled by uncertainty. Our attempts to measure things are
plagued with small errors. Our attempts to understand our world are
blocked by blunders. And, unfortunately, in some cases, people have
been known to lie. In this long-awaited follow-up to his
well-regarded bestseller, The Lady Tasting Tea, David Salsburg
opens a door to the amazing widespread use of statistical methods
by looking at historical examples of errors, blunders and lies from
areas as diverse as archeology, law, economics, medicine,
psychology, sociology, Biblical studies, history, and war-time
espionage. In doing so, he shows how, upon closer statistical
investigation, errors and blunders often lead to useful
information. And how statistical methods have been used to uncover
falsified data. Beginning with Edmund Halley's examination of the
Transit of Venus and ending with a discussion of how many tanks
Rommel had during the Second World War, the author invites the
reader to come along on this easily accessible and fascinating
journey of how to identify the nature of errors, minimize the
effects of blunders, and figure out who the liars are.
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