|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Michael A. Proschan (National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH), Bethesda, Maryland, USA) , Pamela A. ShawPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Chapman & Hall/CRC Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9780367871635ISBN 10: 0367871637 Pages: 328 Publication Date: 10 December 2019 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsThe book Essentials of Probability Theory for Statisticians does not try to compete with probability textbooks like Billingsley (2012) or Chung (2001), but targets a particular audience: graduate students in statistics who need to quickly learn the essentials of probability theory to make rigorous arguments in statistics. The book does not try to give a full introduction to measure theory but instead focuses on the essentials that are needed by statisticians. . . . I think that this textbook fills an important niche: It provides a concise summary of the essentials of probability theory that are needed by statisticians and at the same time relates these concepts to important applications in statistics. Hence, the reader learns to appreciate the interplay between probability and statistics. The book is well written and uses engaging language and plenty of examples and illustrations. Overall, I enjoyed teaching from this book and plan to use it again for future graduate-level teaching in statistics. --Journal of the American Statistical Association This book has tremendous potential for usage in statistics and biostatistics departments where the Ph.D. students would not necessarily have taken a measure theory course but would need a rigorous treatment of probability for their dissertation research and publications in statistical and biostatistics journals ... The authors are commended for providing this valuable book for students in statistics and biostatistics. The illustrative biostatistics examples (throughout chapter 10 but especially in chapter 11) provide motivating rewards for students. --Robert Taylor, Clemson University .. . a very good textbook choice for our courses on advanced probability theory (I, II) at the graduate level. --Jie Yang, University of Illinois at Chicago Many successful graduate students in statistics lack the mathematical prerequisites necessary for Billingsley's book and find such a course too hard ... The strong points of this book are a good selection of topics, good choices for proofs to include and omit, and interesting examples. Some of the examples motivate the need for mathematical theory while others illustrate the relation of the theory to statistical practice. When there is a need for it, the presentation of the material includes side explanations that should help a student with a less solid math background. --Wlodek Byrc, University of Cincinnati I think the authors have done a great job at writing this book. The material is presented carefully and the examples and exercises are appropriate and extremely helpful ... The strongest point of this book is the large collection of statistical applications presented along with each topic. These examples are used to motivate the need for fundamental probabilistic results. The authors have also included a great set of exercises at the end of each section. Another good idea is the summary presented at the end of each chapter. ... I would be happy to adopt this book as a required text for the course that I teach; its content is appropriate and at the right level. --Radu Herbei, Ohio State University . . . I would say Proschan and Shaw have written a useful textbook for introductory graduate or advanced undergraduate use, and one that should help statisticians see why probability is useful. --Thomas Lumley, University of Auckland "" The book Essentials of Probability Theory for Statisticians does not try to compete with probability textbooks like Billingsley (2012) or Chung (2001), but targets a particular audience: graduate students in statistics who need to quickly learn the essentials of probability theory to make rigorous arguments in statistics. The book does not try to give a full introduction to measure theory but instead focuses on the essentials that are needed by statisticians. . . . I think that this textbook fills an important niche: It provides a concise summary of the essentials of probability theory that are needed by statisticians and at the same time relates these concepts to important applications in statistics. Hence, the reader learns to appreciate the interplay between probability and statistics. The book is well written and uses engaging language and plenty of examples and illustrations. Overall, I enjoyed teaching from this book and plan to use it again for future graduate-level teaching in statistics."" —Journal of the American Statistical Association ""This book has tremendous potential for usage in statistics and biostatistics departments where the Ph.D. students would not necessarily have taken a measure theory course but would need a rigorous treatment of probability for their dissertation research and publications in statistical and biostatistics journals … The authors are commended for providing this valuable book for students in statistics and biostatistics. The illustrative biostatistics examples (throughout chapter 10 but especially in chapter 11) provide motivating rewards for students."" —Robert Taylor, Clemson University ""… a very good textbook choice for our courses on advanced probability theory (I, II) at the graduate level."" —Jie Yang, University of Illinois at Chicago ""Many successful graduate students in statistics lack the mathematical prerequisites necessary for Billingsley’s book and find su Author InformationMichael A. Proschan is a mathematical statistician in the Biostatistics Research Branch at the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID). A fellow of the American Statistical Association, Dr. Proschan has published more than 100 articles in numerous peer-reviewed journals. His research interests include monitoring clinical trials, adaptive methods, permutation tests, and probability. He earned a PhD in statistics from Florida State University. Pamela A. Shaw is an assistant professor of biostatistics in the Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine. Dr. Shaw has published several articles in numerous peer-reviewed journals. Her research interests include methodology to address covariate and outcome measurement error, the evaluation of diagnostic tests, and the design of medical studies. She earned a PhD in biostatistics from the University of Washington. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |