Pages that link to "Item:Q900464"
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The following pages link to Karl Pearson's theoretical errors and the advances they inspired (Q900464):
Displaying 16 items.
- The two-piece normal, binormal, or double Gaussian distribution: its origin and rediscoveries (Q254391) (← links)
- The epic story of maximum likelihood (Q449800) (← links)
- Splitting models for multivariate count data (Q2657191) (← links)
- W. F. Sheppard's correspondence with Karl Pearson and the development of his tables and moment estimates (Q2660408) (← links)
- Studies in the history of probability and statistics, L: Karl Pearson and the Rule of Three (Q3224211) (← links)
- A Decomposition of Pearson–Fisher and Dzhaparidze–Nikulin Statistics and Some Ideas for a More Powerful Test Construction (Q3562438) (← links)
- How Ronald Fisher became a mathematical statistician (Q3605591) (← links)
- Studies in the history of probability and statistics XLIII Karl Pearson and quasi-independence (Q4015816) (← links)
- R. A. Fisher on Karl Pearson (Q4287095) (← links)
- Charles Spearman's contributions to test theory (Q4715681) (← links)
- The chi-square controversy: what if Pearson had R? (Q5219959) (← links)
- A conversation with Stephen M. Stigler (Q6540241) (← links)
- The “Poisson” Distribution: History, Reenactments, Adaptations (Q6567080) (← links)
- Karl Pearson -- the scientific life in a statistical age by Theodore M. Porter: a review (Q6573828) (← links)
- Impact of Karl Pearson's work on statistical developments in India (Q6573832) (← links)
- Karl Pearson in Russian contexts (Q6573835) (← links)