000 01710nam a2200217 a 4500
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008 220913s1964 nyu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aarcduce
_carcduce
082 0 _a001.424
100 _aLi, Ching-Chün
245 1 0 _aIntroduction to experimental statistics /
_cChing-Chün Li.
260 _aNew York, N.Y. :
_bMcGraw-Hill,
_c1964
300 _ax, 460 p.
490 0 _aMcGraw-Hill series in probability and statistics
520 3 _a"An author writing a new book in a field where several good texts already exist inevitably wishes to explain why his book is necessary and how it differs from the texts that already exist. My explanation is as follows. A student of mathematical statistics has a large array of books on probability or statistical theory from which to choose; he can find collections of mathematical theorems on the analysis of variance readily available. But the student whose filed is not mathematics – the biological or medical research worker, for example – is in genuine need of a short, nonmathematical course on the design and analysis of experiments, written in a rather informal style. This book is offered, then, as an answer to that need. I have tried to make the book useful to the practising experimental worker as well as to the student. A researcher who cannot spare the time to take a formal course in experimental statistics can profit from studying this volume without benefit of a teacher. Yet the book will also be found suitable for a short, formal course at a college or university."
650 4 _aESTADISTICA MATEMATICA
_91599
650 4 _aBIOMETRIA
_99685
942 _cLIBR
_j001.424 L 18981
_2ddc
999 _c18112
_d18112