This user-friendly introduction to the mathematics of probability and statistics (for readers with a background in calculus) uses numerous applications--drawn from biology, education, economics, engineering, environmental studies, exercise science, health science, manufacturing, opinion polls, psychology, sociology, and sports--to help explain and motivate the concepts. A review of selected mathematical techniques is included, and an accompanying CD-ROM contains many of the figures (many animated), and the data included in the examples and exercises (stored in both Minitab compatible format and ASCII). Empirical and Probability Distributions. Probability. Discrete Distributions. Continuous Distributions. Multivariable Distributions. Sampling Distribution Theory. Importance of Understanding Variability. Estimation. Tests of Statistical Hypotheses. Theory of Statistical Inference. Quality Improvement Through Statistical Methods. For anyone interested in the Mathematics of Probability and Statistics.
This is a very solid textbook on probability and statistics, from the introductory level through intermediate topics, and is reasonable as a reference text as well. The text tends to be dry, rather than chatty, and the topics are developed from scratch or described with proofs, rather than simply being presented as definitions. I consider these to be positive features, in a math text. The examples don't tend to be very interesting, but there are a large number of them, which helps when using this book as a student.
I used the second edition of this book in college. Despite having a large selection of newer, more comprehensive, or more advanced books on my shelf to choose from, Hogg & Tanis is still the book I normally turn to when I need to look up a distribution or statistical test.
A self explanatory book which with a detailed analysis on probability distributions, point estimation and interval estimation techniques. Prerequisite includes understanding of Calculus
The prose is clear, the examples are valuable, the development is very quick to arrive at useful results. I find it walks a very satisfying balance between theory and application, giving proofs everywhere, and only where, the value of seeing the proof outweighs the time required to understand it. It and its associated Introduction to Mathematical Statistics are classics for a good reason.
However, as a classic, it is missing some more modern topics like survival functions.
I think this is a great introduction to statistics. There are a lot of well-thought of books which are complete nonsense. It was refreshing to find a book which is both accessible and rigorous.
I'm actually reading the 4th edition, not the 6th. It was really cheap on Alibris, and how much does statistics change, anyway?