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MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
Reflecting a sea change in how empirical research has been conducted over the past three decades, Foundations of Agnostic Statistics presents an innovative treatment of modern statistical theory for the social and health sciences. This book develops the fundamentals of what the authors call agnostic statistics, which considers what can be learned about the world without assuming that there exists a simple generative model that can be known to be true. Aronow and Miller provide the foundations for statistical inference for researchers unwilling to make assumptions beyond what they or their audience would find credible. Building from first principles, the book covers topics including estimation theory, regression, maximum likelihood, missing data, and causal inference. Using these principles, readers will be able to formally articulate their targets of inquiry, distinguish substantive assumptions from statistical assumptions, and ultimately engage in cutting-edge quantitative empirical research that contributes to human knowledge.
Contents:
Introduction; Part I. Probability: 1. Probability theory; 2. Summarizing distributions; Part II. Statistics: 3. Learning from random samples; 4. Regression; 5. Parametric models; Part III. Identification: 6. Missing data; 7. Causal inference.
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: January, 2019
Pages: None
Weight: 520g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Epidemiology, General Issues
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