Search for books and compare prices on all major online booksellers with one click!

Home  About UsSuggest BookstoreRecommend Us 
    Title/Keywords ISBN  

Statistics for the Life Sciences (3rd Edition)

AUTHOR: Jeffrey A. Witmer, Myra L. Samuels
ISBN: 013041316X

SHORT DESCRIPTION: "Statistics for the Life Sciences" presents the key concepts of statistics as applied to the life sciences, while incorporating tools and themes of modern data analysis. The book emphasizes interpretation of results using real data, which...

Compare Price


HOME--->> Science --->>Biological Sciences --->>Biology
 
Biology
         Editorial Review

Statistics for the Life Sciences (3rd Edition)
- Book Review,
by Jeffrey A. Witmer, Myra L. Samuels

From Book News, Inc.
An introductory book/disk text in statistics, for undergraduate and graduate students majoring in the life sciences. Its aims are to show students how statistical reasoning is used in biological, medical, and agricultural research; to enable students to carry out simple statistical analyses and to interpret results; and to raise awareness of basic statistical issues. Chapter exercise are designed to reduce computational effort and focus attention on concepts, with only a few exercises requiring a computer. Assumes a prior course in algebra. Book News, Inc.®, Portland, OR

Book Description
Statistics for the Life Sciences presents the key concepts of statistics as applied to the life sciences, while incorporating tools and themes of modern data analysis. The book emphasizes interpretation of results using real data, which facilitates an understanding of statistics and data through the use of graphical data and analysis. The Third Edition has added many new sections to cover probability rules, random variables, the Wilcoxon Signed-Rank Test, and two-way ANOVA and ANOVA for randomized blocks designs. In addition, there is expanded treatment of logistic regression in Chapter 12. This book is an essential statistics reference for professionals and scientists in biology, agronomy, medical and health sciences, nutrition, pharmacy, animal science, physical education, forestry, and other life sciences.

The publisher, Prentice-Hall Engineering/Science/Mathematics
The style of Statistics for the Life Sciences is informal and uses only minimal mathematical notation. There are no prerequisites except elementary algebra; anyone who can read a biology or chemistry textbook can read this text. It is suitable for use by graduate or undergraduate students in biology, agronomy, medical and health sciences, nutrition, pharmacy, animal science, physical education, forestry and other life sciences. Look for a new edition in 1999.

From the Back Cover
Statistics for the Life Sciences presents the key concepts of statistics as applied to the life sciences, while incorporating tools and themes of modern data analysis. The book emphasizes interpretation of results using real data, which facilitates an understanding of statistics and data through the use of graphical data and analysis. The Third Edition has added many new sections to cover probability rules, random variables, the Wilcoxon Signed-Rank Test, and two-way ANOVA and ANOVA for randomized blocks designs. In addition, there is expanded treatment of logistic regression in Chapter 12. This book is an essential statistics reference for professionals and scientists in biology, agronomy, medical and health sciences, nutrition, pharmacy, animal science, physical education, forestry, and other life sciences.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Statistics for the Life Sciences is an introductory text in statistics, specifically addressed to students specializing in the life sciences. Its primary aims are (1) to show students how statistical reasoning is used in biological, medical, and agricultural research; (2) to enable students confidently to carry out simple statistical analyses and to interpret the results; and (3) to raise students' awareness of basic statistical issues such as randomization, confounding, and the role of independent replication. Style and Approach The style of Statistics for the Life Sciences is informal and uses only minimal mathematical notation. There are no prerequisites except elementary algebra; anyone who can read a biology or chemistry textbook can read this text. It is suitable for use by graduate or undergraduate students in biology, agronomy, medical and health sciences, nutrition, pharmacy, animal science, physical education, forestry, and other life sciences. Use of Real Data. Real examples are more interesting and often more enlightening than artificial ones. Statistics for the Life Sciences includes hundreds of examples and exercises that use real data, representing a wide variety of research in the life sciences. Each example has been chosen to illustrate a particular statistical issue. The exercises have been designed to reduce computational effort and focus students' attention on concepts and interpretations. Emphasis on Ideas. The text emphasizes statistical ideas rather than computations or mathematical formulations. Probability theory is included only to support statistics concepts. Throughout the discussion of descriptive and inferential statistics, interpretation is stressed. By means of salient examples, the student is shown why it is important that an analysis be appropriate for the research question to be answered, for the statistical design of the study, and for the nature of the underlying distributions. The student is warned against the common blunder of confusing statistical nonsignificance with practical insignificance, and is encouraged to use confidence intervals to assess the magnitude of an effect. The student is led to recognize the impact on real research of design concepts such as random sampling, randomization, efficiency, and the control of extraneous variation by blocking or adjustment. Numerous exercises amplify and reinforce the student's grasp of these ideas. The Role of the Computer/ The analysis of research data is usually carried out with the aid of a computer. Computer-generated graphs and output, either from the statistical software DataDesk or MINITAB, are shown at several places in the text. MINITAB commands are given in a number of places (although MINITAB output can also be generated from menus while running the software). However, in studying statistics it is desirable for the student to gain experience working directly with data, using paper and pencil and a hand-held calculator, as well as a computer. This experience will help the student appreciate the nature and purpose of the statistical computations. The student is thus prepared to make intelligent use of the computer—to give it appropriate instructions and properly interpret the output. Accordingly, most of the exercises in this text are intended for hand calculation. Selected exercises, identified with the words "computer exercise" are intended to be completed with use of a computer. (Typically, the computer exercises require calculations that would be unduly burdensome if carried out by hand.) Organization This text is organized to permit coverage in one semester of the maximum number of important statistical ideas, including power, multiple inference, and the basic principles of design. By including or excluding optional sections, the instructor can also use the text for a one-quarter course or a two-quarter course. It is suitable for a terminal course or for the first course of a sequence. The following is a brief outline of the text: Chapter 1: Introduction. The nature and impact of variability in biological data. Chapter 2: Orientation. Frequency distributions, descriptive statistics, the concept of population versus sample. Chapters 3, 4, and 5: Theoretical preparation. Probability, binomial and normal distributions, sampling distributions. Chapter 6: Confidence interval for a mean or for a proportion. Chapter 7: Comparison of two independent samples. The t-test and the Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test. Chapter 8: Design. Randomization, blocking, hazards of observational studies. Chapter 9: Inference for paired samples. Confidence interval, t-test, sign test, and Wilcoxon signed-rank test. Chapter 10: Categorical data. Chi-square goodness-of-fit test, conditional probability, contingency tables. Optional sections cover Fisher's exact test, McNemar's test, and odds ratios. Chapter 11: Analysis of variance: one-way layout. Multiple comparison procedures, two-way analysis of variance, contrasts, and interaction in two-factor designs are included in optional sections. Chapter 12: Regression and correlation. Descriptive and inferential aspects of simple linear regression and correlation and the relationship between them. Chapter 13: A summary of inference methods. Statistical tables are provided at the back of the book. The tables of critical values are especially easy to use, because they follow mutually consistent layouts and so are used in essentially the same way. Optional appendices at the back of the book give the interested student a deeper look into such matters as how the Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney null distribution is calculated.


Buy from Amazon     Compare Prices



         Book Review

Statistics for the Life Sciences (3rd Edition)
- Book Reviews,
by Jeffrey A. Witmer, Myra L. Samuels

Statistics for the Life Sciences

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Statistics for the Life Sciences presents the key concepts of statistics as applied to the life sciences, while incorporating tools and themes of modern data analysis. The book emphasizes interpretation of results using real data which facilitates an understanding of statistics and data through the use of graphical data and analysis. It also provides a summary of methods in Chapter 13: "What to do When." The second edition of Statistics for the Life Sciences has been revised to include a number of new sections covering boxplots, probability trees, and probability plots. In addition, chapter 8 has been expanded to include a more complete discussion of issues in data collection, including observational studies vs. experiments, the placebo effect, the use of historical controls vs. active controls, and randomized response sampling. It now includes a new Chapter 10, which includes all of the chi-square test material as well as new sections on Fisher's exact test, McNemar's test, and relative risk and odds ratios. An essential statistics reference for professionals and scientists in biology, agronomy, medical and health sciences, nutrition, pharmacy, animal science, physical education, forestry, and other life sciences.

FROM THE CRITICS

Booknews

An introductory book/disk text in statistics, for undergraduate and graduate students majoring in the life sciences. Its aims are to show students how statistical reasoning is used in biological, medical, and agricultural research; to enable students to carry out simple statistical analyses and to interpret results; and to raise awareness of basic statistical issues. Chapter exercise are designed to reduce computational effort and focus attention on concepts, with only a few exercises requiring a computer. Assumes a prior course in algebra. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.


Buy from Barnes & Noble     Compare Prices




HOME  |  Recommend bookstore  |  Rate bookstore  |  Link to us  |  Report bug  |  Contact us
Copyright© 2003 - 2005, PowerBookSearch.com. All Rights Reserved.