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         Pearson Egon:     more books (15)
  1. The Sources and Nature of the Statistics of the United Kingdom.Volume 1 and 2. With a Foreword by Egon Pearson. by Maurice [Ed] Kendall, 1957-01-01
  2. Joint Statistical Papers by Jerzy; Pearson, Egon Sharpe Neyman, 1966-01-01
  3. Table of the Logarithms of the Complete -Function (for Arguments 2 to 1200, I.E. Beyond Legendre's Range): -1922 by E. S. (Egon Sharpe) Pearson, 2009-07-24
  4. The Sources and Nature of the Statistics of the United Kingdom (Volumes I and II by Maurice G.; Hill, Bradford A.; Pearson, Egon S. Kendall, 1952
  5. On the Problem of the most Efficient Tests of Statistical Hypotheses. by Jerzy (1894-1981), & Egon S. PEARSON (1895-1980). NEYMAN, 1933-01-01
  6. Neyman?Pearson Lemma: Lemma, Statistical Hypothesis Testing, Likelihood-ratio Test, Jerzy Neyman, Egon Pearson
  7. The selected papers of E.S. Pearson by Egon Sharpe Pearson, 1966
  8. The selected papers of E. S. Pearson by Egon Sharpe Pearson, 1966
  9. Biometrika tables for statisticians by Egon Sharpe Pearson, 1954
  10. 'Biometrika' tables for statisticians by Egon Sharpe Pearson, 1966
  11. Biometrika Volume 34 1947 by Egon S Pearson, 1947-01-01
  12. Statistical Research Memoirs: Volume I & II (Author's Copy) by Jerzy; Pearson, Egon S. (editors) Neyman, 1938
  13. Table Of The Logarithms Of The Complete -function (for Arguments 2 To 1200, I.e. Beyond Legendre's Range)
  14. Table of the logarithms of the complete -function (for argumen by Pearson. E. S. (Egon Sharpe). 1895-1980., 1922-01-01

81. Jerzy Neyman
Neyman studied under Karl pearson while in London. He also made contacts withEgon pearson, RA Fisher, and W. S. Gosset while at University College.
http://www.edu365.com/aulanet/comsoc/Lab_estadistica/estadistics/Neyman.htm
URL: http://www.mrs.umn.edu/~sungurea/introstat/history/w98/Jerzy_Neyman.html Jerzy Neyman April 16, 1894-August 5, 1981 Born Jerzy Splawa-Neyman(later dropping Splawa at age 30) in Bendery, Russia, Neyman had an early education by a governesses in French and German. This made Neyman proficient in many languages. In 1912, he entered the University of Kharkov to stu dy physics and mathematics. While studying at Kharkov, Neyman was taught by S.N. Bernstein. Bernstein introduced him to Karl Pearson’s Grammar of Science. Later Neyman would say that this influenced his development, but this was not the main i nterest of his during his studies. He was really interested in the research in measure theory of Lebesgue. This was the subject of most of his early papers. In 1921, Neyman was forced to move to Poland to due to the war between Poland and Russia. Neyman was 27 at the time. In Poland, Neyman worked with W. Sierpinski before moving to London in 1924. Neyman studied under Karl Pearson while in London. He also made contacts with Egon Pearson, R. A. Fisher, and W. S. Gosset while at University College. By 1934, Karl Pearson had retired and his department was divided between his son Egon and Fisher. Egon invited Neyman to work with him. They worked on the theory of testing hypotheses. They supplied logical foundation and mathematical rigor to the theory that was missing in previous methodology. Their work was disputed by some mathematicians, including Fisher. The Neyman-Pearson ideas eventually spr ead throughout mathematics. Their ideas made sure that samples were large enough to avoid false representation.

82. ·j´Mµ²ªG¸Ô²Ó¸ê®Æ
The summary for this Chinese (Traditional) page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://probstat.nuk.edu.tw/stat_people/rst_002.asp?nok=p02

83. Frequency Probability - Wikipedia
This school is often associated with the names of Jerzy Neyman and EgonPearson who described the logic of statistical hypothesis testing.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency_probability
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Frequency probability
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Statistical regularity has motivated the development of the relative frequency concept of probability. Most of the procedures commonly used to make statistical estimates or tests were developed by statisticians who used this concept exclusively. They are usually called frequentists , and their position is called frequentism . This school is often associated with the names of Jerzy Neyman and Egon Pearson who described the logic of statistical hypothesis testing Since the 18th century , there has been a debate among statisticians featured the frequentists versus the Bayesians . The former insisted that statistical procedures only made sense when one uses the relative frequency concept. The Bayesians supported the use of

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The summary for this Korean page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://center.duksung.ac.kr/statics.html
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