Abstract
The history of mathematical statistics in the United States prior to 1885 is reviewed, with emphasis upon the works of Robert Adrain, Benjamin and Charles Peirce, Simon Newcomb, and Erastus De Forest. While the period before 1850 produced little of substance, the years from 1850 to 1885 saw such innovations as an outlier rejection procedure, randomized design of experiments, elicitation of personal probabilities, kernel estimation of density functions, an anticipation of sufficiency, a runs test for fit, a Monte Carlo study, optimal linear smoothing, and the fitting of gamma distributions by the method of moments. Reasons for the rapid acceleration in the growth of the field are explored.
Keywords
Related Publications
Spline Smoothing: The Equivalent Variable Kernel Method
The spline smoothing approach to nonparametric regression and curve estimation is considered. It is shown that, in a certain sense, spline smoothing corresponds approximately to...
Smoothing Parameter Selection in Nonparametric Regression Using an Improved Akaike Information Criterion
Summary Many different methods have been proposed to construct nonparametric estimates of a smooth regression function, including local polynomial, (convolution) kernel and smoo...
Identifying the Optimal Integration Time in Hamiltonian Monte Carlo
By leveraging the natural geometry of a smooth probabilistic system, Hamiltonian Monte Carlo yields computationally efficient Markov Chain Monte Carlo estimation. At least provi...
Riemann Manifold Langevin and Hamiltonian Monte Carlo Methods
Summary The paper proposes Metropolis adjusted Langevin and Hamiltonian Monte Carlo sampling methods defined on the Riemann manifold to resolve the shortcomings of existing Mont...
Empirical Functionals and Efficient Smoothing Parameter Selection
SUMMARY A striking feature of curve estimation is that the smoothing parameter ĥ 0, which minimizes the squared error of a kernel or smoothing spline estimator, is very difficul...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1978
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 6
- Issue
- 2
- Citations
- 128
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1214/aos/1176344123