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Making Statistics Work - by Duncan Foley & Ellis Scharfenaker (Paperback)
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Highlights
- Conventional "frequentist" methods that dominate the field of statistics are generally inconsistent and liable to catastrophic failure in some contexts.
- About the Author: Duncan K. Foley is the Leo Model Professor Emeritus of Economics at the New School for Social Research and external professor at the Santa Fe Institute.
- 328 Pages
- Business + Money Management, Statistics
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About the Book
Making Statistics Work presents a synthesis of information theory and Bayesian inference that provides a consistent, powerful, and flexible framework for data inference, allowing for new approaches to many of the unresolved questions of statistics.Book Synopsis
Conventional "frequentist" methods that dominate the field of statistics are generally inconsistent and liable to catastrophic failure in some contexts. These weaknesses have become particularly concerning in relation to crises of replicability and credibility in science. Two alternatives have been proposed to address these flaws--classical Bayesian inference and the principle of maximum entropy--but the connections between them remain controversial.
Making Statistics Work presents a synthesis of information theory and Bayesian inference that addresses these fundamental problems. It provides a consistent, powerful, and flexible framework for data inference based on rigorous logic derived from first principles, allowing for new approaches to many of the unresolved questions of statistics. Duncan K. Foley and Ellis Scharfenaker illustrate the application of this framework and the reasoning behind it across a variety of important statistical problems, such as the inference underlying "gold standard" clinical trials, models of human behavior employed in behavioral finance and psychology, analysis of macroeconomic policy, the relationship of classical probability to quantum physics, and the limitations of linear regression analysis. Making Statistics Work offers new insight into contentious topics, from problems of causality and confounding variables in randomized experimental trials to the foundations of Bayesian and frequentist probability theory.About the Author
Duncan K. Foley is the Leo Model Professor Emeritus of Economics at the New School for Social Research and external professor at the Santa Fe Institute. He is the author of Understanding Capital: Marx's Economic Theory (1986) and Adam's Fallacy: A Guide to Economic Theology (2006) and coauthor of Growth and Distribution (second edition, 2019), among other books.
Ellis Scharfenaker is an associate professor of economics at the University of Utah. His research integrates Bayesian inference, information theory, and political economy to study industrial dynamics and income distribution.