David S. Moore

David Sheldon Moore is an American statistician, who is known for his leadership of statistics education for many decades.

David S. Moore
NationalityAmerican
Alma materPrinceton University, Cornell University
Known forwriting statistics textbooks
Scientific career
FieldsStatistics

Biography

David S. Moore received his A.B. from Princeton University and the Ph.D. from Cornell University in mathematics.[1]

In statistics education, David S. Moore is the author of a series of influential textbooks in statistical science, which use only high school algebra: Introduction to the Practice of Statistics (with George McCabe), of An Introduction to the Basic Practice of Statistics, and of Statistics: Concepts and Controversies.

In statistical science, David S. Moore has done research in the asymptotic theory of robust and nonparametric statistics.

Professor Moore was the 1998 President of the American Statistical Association.

David S. Moore is a retired (in 2004) Shanti S. Gupta Distinguished Professor of Statistics, Emeritus at Purdue University.[2]

Professor Moore has served as the second president of the International Association for Statistical Education. He was the content developer for the Annenberg/Corporation for Public Broadcasting college-level telecourse Against All Odds: Inside Statistics.

Publications

  • Introduction to the Practice of Statistics with George McCabe. ISBN 0716764008
  • The Basic Practice of Statistics. ISBN 071677478X
  • Statistics: Concepts and Controversies. ISBN 1429237023
  • Moore, David S (Jan 1988). "Should Mathematicians Teach Statistics?". The College Mathematics Journal. 19 (1): 3–7. doi:10.2307/2686686. JSTOR 2686686.
  • Cobb, George W.; Moore, David S (Nov 1997). "Mathematics, Statistics, and Teaching". The American Mathematical Monthly. 104 (9): 801–823. doi:10.2307/2975286. JSTOR 2975286.
  • Moore, David S.; Cobb, George W. (August–September 2000). "Statistics and Mathematics: Tension and Cooperation". The American Mathematical Monthly. 107 (7): 615–630. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.422.4356. doi:10.2307/2589117. JSTOR 2589117. MR 1543690.
gollark: "Sadness" is some complex state or collection of states or something which the brain gets in, generally because of a bad thing of some sort.
gollark: Or in my case complex "solid state farming" machines which grow trees in magic boxes.
gollark: REAL minecrafters set up industrial-scale deforestation machinery.
gollark: > emotions tell us as much about our environment and circumstance as touch or smell or sightThey really seem more like convenient brain heuristics than some sort of actual sensory input.
gollark: It's "free" because there's no money, but not actually-free as in it can be produced infinitely with no inputs.

References


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