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Works are listed here by topic; for a chronological list of these same works, click here.
The chronological list helps you see what's been added since your last visit.
This is not a vitae; it lists only works published here at this site.
Topics
| Regression and linear models | Tests on the center of a distribution |
| Meta-analysis | Contingency tables |
| Specific statistical and measurement issues in psychology Infant looking times, The Bell Curve | Comparative neuroanatomy and neural ontogeny |
| Miscellaneous statistical methods Transforming variables, the sign test, a permutation test, factor analysis | Some quantitative methods with little application to psychology Statistical process control, life expectancy, the Electoral College |
ALLSETS: a simple algorithm for all-subsets regression (4/98)
Using ALLSETS to identify collinear sets (4/98)
Typos and other errors in Regression and Linear Models (3/98)
Supplementing random assignment with statistical control (8/96)
How many covariates to use in randomized experiments? (8/96)
Computation-based estimates of true shrunken multiple correlations (9/96)
Correcting the standard errors of regression slopes for heteroscedasticity (1/97)
A regression approach to time-series analysis (9/96)
Combining human judgment and multiple regression (1/97)
Multivariate analysis (1/97)
A new diagnostic measure di for regression (3/98)
A normal-scores alternative to the Wilcoxon test (9/96)
REPTOC--An adaptive alternative to the Wilcoxon signed-ranks test (1/97)
A meta-analytic "p-pooler" with three advantages (9/96)
New tables for the p-product meta-analytic method (2/98)
Some new 2 x 2 tests (9/96)
A free exact 2 x 2 test (5/04)
"The Bell Curve"--solid center or abnormal deviate? (8/96)
The sign test (9/96) (includes a large table)
Factor analysis (1/97)
Binomial tables. Each table shows the probability p of s or more successes in k independent trials, where P is the probability of success on each trial. For k up to 1000, tables show all values of p between .1 and .0001. (3/99)
Table for P = .01..... Table for P = .05..... Table for P = .1..... Table for P = .5
Compact binomial tables. Let P denote the probability of success on each trial, s the number of successes, and p the probability of s or more successes in k independent trials. For s up to 1000 and for four values of P, these tables allow you to tell whether p falls below .05, .01, or .001. (2/98)
Table for P = .01..... Table for P = .05..... Table for P = .1..... Table for P = .5
Are we measuring "life expectancy" the best way? (1/97)
The Electoral College: bulwark against fraud (3/98)