Data structures for computational statistics

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Data structures for computational statistics

Sigbert Klinke

(Contributions to statistics)

Physica, c1997

Available at  / 22 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. [277]-284

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Since the beginning of the seventies computer hardware is available to use programmable computers for various tasks. During the nineties the hardware has developed from the big main frames to personal workstations. Nowadays it is not only the hardware which is much more powerful, but workstations can do much more work than a main frame, compared to the seventies. In parallel we find a specialization in the software. Languages like COBOL for business orientated programming or Fortran for scientific computing only marked the beginning. The introduction of personal computers in the eighties gave new impulses for even further development, already at the beginning of the seven ties some special languages like SAS or SPSS were available for statisticians. Now that personal computers have become very popular the number of pro grams start to explode. Today we will find a wide variety of programs for almost any statistical purpose (Koch & Haag 1995).

Table of Contents

1 Introduction.- 1.1 Motivation.- 1.2 The Need of Interactive Environments.- 1.3 Modern Computer Soft- and Hardware.- 2 Exploratory Statistical Techniques.- 2.1 Descriptive Statistics.- 2.2 Some Stratifications.- 2.3 Boxplots.- 2.4 Quantile-Quantile Plot.- 2.5 Histograms, Regressograms and Charts.- 2.6 Bivariate Plots.- 2.7 Scatterplot Matrices.- 2.8 Three Dimensional Plots.- 2.9 Higher Dimensional Plots.- 2.10 Basic Properties for Graphical Windows.- 3 Some Statistical Applications.- 3.1 Cluster Analysis.- 3.2 Teachware.- 3.3 Regression Methods.- 4 Exploratory Projection Pursuit.- 4.1 Motivation and History.- 4.2 The Basis of Exploratory Projection Pursuit.- 4.3 Application to the Swiss Banknote Dataset.- 4.4 Multivariate Exploratory Projection Pursuit.- 4.5 Discrete Exploratory Projection Pursuit.- 4.6 Requirements for a Tool Doing Exploratory Projection Pursuit.- 5 Data Structures.- 5.1 For Graphical Objects.- 5.2 For Data Objects.- 5.3 For Linking.- 5.4 Existing Computational Environments.- 6 Implementation in XploRe.- 6.1 Data Structures in XploRe 3.2.- 6.2 Selected Commands in XploRe 3.2.- 6.3 Selected Tools in XploRe 3.2.- 6.4 Data Structure in XploRe 4.0.- 6.5 Commands and Macros in XploRe 4.0.- 7 Conclusion.- A The Datasets.- A.1 Boston Housing Data.- A.2 Berlin Housing Data and Berlin Flat Data.- A.3 Swiss Banknote Data.- A.4 Other Data.- B Mean Squared Error of the Friedman-Tukey Index.- C Density Estimation on Hexagonal Bins.- D Programs.- D.1 XploRe Programs.- D.2 Mathematica Program.- E Tables.- References.

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Details

  • NCID
    BA31006763
  • ISBN
    • 3790809829
  • Country Code
    gw
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Heidelberg
  • Pages/Volumes
    viii, 284 p.
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Classification
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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