Thomas J. Santner is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Statistics at The Ohio State University. At Ohio State, he has served as department Chair and Director of the Department”s Statistical Consulting Service. Previously, he was a professor in the School of Operations Research and Industrial Engineering at Cornell University. His research interests include the design and analysis of experiments, particularly those involving computer simulators, Bayesian inference, and the analysis of discrete response data. He is a Fellow of the American Statistical Association, the Institute of Mathematical Statistics, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and is an elected ordinary member of the International Statistical Institute. He has held visiting appointments at the National Cancer Institute, the University of Washington, Ludwig Maximilians Universität (Munich, Germany), the National Institute of Statistical Science (NISS), and the Isaac Newton Institute (Cambridge, England).
Brian J. Williams has been Statistician at the Los Alamos National Laboratory RAND Corporation since 2003. His research interests include experimental design, computer experiments, Bayesian inference, spatial statistics and statistical computing. Williams was named a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 2015 and is also the recipient of the Los Alamos Achievement Award for his leadership role in the Consortium for Advanced Simulation of Light Water Reactors (CASL) Program. He holds a doctorate in statistics from The Ohio State University.
William I. Notz is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Statistics at The Ohio State University. At Ohio State, he has served as acting department chair, associate dean of the College of Mathematical and Physical Sciences, and as director of the department”s Statistical Consulting Service. His research focuses on experimental designs for computer experiments and he is particularly interested in sequential strategies for selecting points at which to run a computer simulator in order to optimize some performance measure related to the objectives of the computer experiment. A Fellow of the American Statistical Association, Notz has also served as Editor of the journals Technometrics and the Journal of Statistics Education.
5 Ebooks door William I. Notz
Thomas J. Santner & Brian J. Williams: The Design and Analysis of Computer Experiments
This book describes methods for designing and analyzing experiments that are conducted using a computer code, a computer experiment, and, when possible, a physical experiment. Computer experiments co …
PDF
Engels
€139.09
Jonathan Bart & Michael A. Fligner: Sampling and Statistical Methods for Behavioral Ecologists
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PDF
Engels
DRM
€55.21
William I. Notz & Thomas J. Santner: Design and Analysis of Computer Experiments
In the past 15 to 20 years, the computer has become a popular tool for exploring the relationship between a measured response and factors thought to affect the response. In many cases, scientific the …
PDF
Engels
DRM
€139.73
Michael Fligner & David S. Moore: Basic Practice of Statistics
Now available with Macmillan’s new online learning tool Achieve, the ninth edition of The Basic Practice of Statistics 9e teaches statistical thinking by guiding students through an investigative pro …
EPUB
Engels
DRM
€61.01
David S. Moore & William I. Notz: Statistics: Concepts and Controversies
Statistics as a Liberal Discipline There are books on statistical theory, and there books on statistical methods. This is neither.Now available with Macmillan’s online learning platform Achieve, Stat …
EPUB
Engels
DRM
€73.54