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  1. Modern applied mathematics: probability, statistics, operational research

    Turner, John Christopher
    London, English Universities Press, 1970.

  2. Statistics

    Donnelly, Robert A., Jr.
    Third edition, First American edition. - Indianapolis, Indiana : Alpha, a member of Penguin Random House LLC, 2016.

    Statistics is a class that is required in many college majors, and it's an increasingly popular Advanced Placement high school course. In addition to math and technical students, many business and liberal arts students are required to take it as a fundamental component of their majors. A knowledge of statistical interpretation is vital for many careers. Idiot's Guides: Statistics explains the fundamental tenets in language anyone can understand. Content includes: - Calculating descriptive statistics - Measures of central tendency: mean, median, and mode - Probability - Variance analysis - Inferential statistics - Hypothesis testing - Organizing data into statistical charts and tables.

    Online Safari Books Online

  3. Logic of Miracles : Making Sense of Rare, Really Rare, and Impossibly Rare Events

    Mérő, László
    New Haven, CT : Yale University Press, [2018]

    We live in a much more turbulent world than we like to think, but the science we use to analyze economic, financial, and statistical events mostly disregards the world's essentially chaotic nature. We need to get used to the idea that wildly improbable events are actually part of the natural order. The renowned Hungarian mathematician and psychologist László MérŠ' explains how the wild and mild worlds (which he names Wildovia and Mildovia) coexist, and that different laws apply to each. Even if we live in an ultimately wild universe, he argues, we're better off pretending that it obeys Mildovian laws. Doing so may amount to a self†'fulfilling prophecy and create an island of predictability in a very rough sea. Perched on the ragged border between economics and complexity theory, MérŠ' proposes to extend the reach of science to subjects previously considered outside its grasp: the unpredictable, unrepeatable, highly improbable events we commonly call "miracles."

    Online DeGruyter

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