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Applied Statistics and Probability for Engineers

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Applied Statistics and Probability for Engineers, 6th Edition provides a practical approach oriented to engineering as well as chemical and physical sciences. Students learn how the material will be relevant in their careers through the integration throughout of unique problem sets that reflect realistic applications and situations. Applied Statistics, 6e is suitable for either a one- or two-term course in probability and statistics. The 6th edition of this text focuses on real engineering applications and real engineering solutions while including material on the bootstrap, increased emphasis on the use of P-value, coverage of equivalence testing, combining p-values, many new examples and entirely revised homework sections.

832 pages, Hardcover

First published February 9, 1994

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About the author

Douglas C. Montgomery

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5 stars
32 (20%)
4 stars
56 (36%)
3 stars
31 (20%)
2 stars
21 (13%)
1 star
14 (9%)
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Muneel Zaidi.
195 reviews88 followers
August 15, 2014
If I find an error in a textbook, I make a note of it so I can let my professors know; at this point my textbook is so riddled with "error here" Post-It notes, it would have been easier to mark the pages without errors. If, like me, you are being held hostage by the textbook-industrial complex propagated by your school, here are a few things to look out for:

- Incorrect mathematics: I have no idea how this book has the gall to say that "5292+270+246=6050" [Example 2-8 page 21]. I must have missed that identity in math class.
- Internal reference errors: The text will prompt you to look at a certain figure to illustrate its point, and the figure will have nothing to do with the example. It's like they assumed nobody was reading [Figure 4.6 pg 112].
- I have a sneaking suspicion that not all the answers to the odd questions in the back are correct, but I can't prove it. Maybe I'm just too stupid to get the answers in the back, but there are literally questions just asking to count things, and the answers in the back don't agree with my counting.
- Made-up equations. This is highlighted in the text as equation to know for "lower-confidence bounds around a mean":

WTF is that? It's like some sort of post- apocalyptic dystopian math yet to be conjured up [Equation 8-8 pg 287]
- They mess up the fundamentals. I'm sorry, but a Continuous Uniform Distribution is not modeled by
f(x) =(b-a) from a Any statistician would flip their shit over that proclamation. [Equation 4-6 pg 116]

The above is just a sample of the many errors I found. I usually learn by teaching myself from text, but when they screwed up the central limit theorem, I lost all trust in this text and actually had to go to lectures to figure it out.

Beyond the errors I listed above (there are plenty more), I found it difficult to follow along with a lot of examples in this book. Some of the exercises are completely pointless or woefully underexplained. Often they would introduce an equation to use and say "We'll leave it to the reader to derive this on their own as an exercise", which baffles me. If I could derive statistical principles on my own, I don't think I'd be taking an entry level statistics class... I'd probably be with mad stat bitches flaunting all the swag I got by selling poorly written statistics textbooks.

If you have to use this book, I hope you have a good professor. Otherwise, I recommend cheating.
Profile Image for William Schram.
2,340 reviews96 followers
August 19, 2025
Applied Statistics and Probability for Engineers is a textbook written by Douglas C. Montgomery and George C. Runger. I don't know enough about Statistics or Probability to proofread it, but it seems that there are mistakes in the text. Whether or not the fourth edition contains egregious errors remains to be seen. Wiley published the fourth edition in 2007.

So here's the breakdown of what I did while reading this book. I looked up the equations and glossary terms in Wikipedia and Google, and then checked them against the text. I found it difficult to trust the book, even though I didn't run any of the practice problems. It's hard to look at a book without judging it when the rating is so low, and all of the reviews are complaints about its quality.

I bought this from Half-Price Books for under $10. Given that, I don't know how the publishers have the gall to charge $121 for a Kindle edition, unless they fixed the mistakes in that version, or if it is a later version of the text. The only problem I have now is that if I sell this book back and find it again, I'll forget I bought it before and rebuy it.

The book was okay. Thanks for reading my review, and see you next time.
2 reviews
October 24, 2017
This book is awful. There are many mistakes in the book. Many of the practice problems have incorrect answers in the back. Formulas are introduced poorly. The equations seem out of left field and rarely are motivated to the reader. Stay away from this book.
1 review
May 15, 2018
DO NOT attempt to use this book to teach yourself. There are many errors and typos that will lead to the wrong conclusions. Use caution and consult someone who already knows statistics and probability (hopefully you have a good professor) well enough to tell you where the errors are.
Profile Image for Trang Dương.
53 reviews2 followers
June 28, 2021
- The explain is not clear with too little theory for enhancing your mathematical thinking
I don't think this is a good book to teach yourself. However, the exercises make my grades higher because i do the same problem repetitively.
1 review
July 4, 2020
Easy to follow steps for learning simple linear regressions with concrete examples !
Profile Image for Michele.
116 reviews2 followers
June 7, 2013
Poorly written. Too many times equations are given without defining the variables. In that a given variable letter denotes different variables depending on the equation, this is a serious failing.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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