Overview
- Authors:
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Frederick Mosteller
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Department of Statistics, Harvard University, Cambridge, USA
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David L. Wallace
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Department of Statistics, University of Chicago, Chicago, USA
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Table of contents (10 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages i-xxxviii
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- Frederick Mosteller, David L. Wallace
Pages 1-15
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- Frederick Mosteller, David L. Wallace
Pages 16-45
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- Frederick Mosteller, David L. Wallace
Pages 46-91
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- Frederick Mosteller, David L. Wallace
Pages 92-199
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- Frederick Mosteller, David L. Wallace
Pages 200-214
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- Frederick Mosteller, David L. Wallace
Pages 215-228
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- Frederick Mosteller, David L. Wallace
Pages 229-242
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- Frederick Mosteller, David L. Wallace
Pages 243-262
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- Frederick Mosteller, David L. Wallace
Pages 263-267
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- Frederick Mosteller, David L. Wallace
Pages 268-281
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Back Matter
Pages 283-306
About this book
The new version has two additions. First, at the suggestion of Stephen Stigler I we have replaced the Table of Contents by what he calls an Analytic Table of Contents. Following the title of each section or subsection is a description of the content of the section. This material helps the reader in several ways, for example: by giving a synopsis of the book, by explaining where the various data tables are and what they deal with, by telling what theory is described where. We did several distinct full studies for the Federalist papers as well as many minor side studies. Some or all may offer information both to the applied and the theoretical reader. We therefore try to give in this Contents more than the few cryptic words in a section heading to ~peed readers in finding what they want. Seconq, we have prepared an extra chapter dealing with authorship work published from. about 1969 to 1983. Although a chapter cannot compre hensively Gover a field where many books now appear, it can mention most ofthe book-length works and the main thread of authorship' studies published in English. We founq biblical authorship studies so extensive and com plicated that we thought it worthwhile to indicate some papers that would bring out the controversies that are taking place. We hope we have given the flavor of developments over the 15 years mentioned. We have also corrected a few typographical errors.
Authors and Affiliations
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Department of Statistics, Harvard University, Cambridge, USA
Frederick Mosteller
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Department of Statistics, University of Chicago, Chicago, USA
David L. Wallace