Best business statistics books according to redditors

We found 240 Reddit comments discussing the best business statistics books. We ranked the 78 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

Next page

Top Reddit comments about Business Statistics:

u/2357111 · 330 pointsr/math

For "books written for kids", I was a child prodigy and I liked the cartoon guides - I read the stats and the physics ones. I liked the how did we find out series as well, I think?


Textbooks might not be so bad. You find them dry, but he might not.


Emailing professors in the area was very helpful. If he understands what he's learned from the differential and integral calculus textbook, he's probably ready to talk to professors.


You don't necessarily need to teach him to follow in anyone's footsteps. If he's reading textbooks for fun, he's probably enjoys doing that. It's more important that he keep doing what he enjoys than that he imitates someone else who was successful. Still, it's nice to know about people who were similar to you in history! But it's not like he needs to go into physics or math to take advantage of his genius - some former child prodigies are already working in those fields, and while I like to think most are doing good work and advancing the state of their fields, none of them have revolutionized them recently.

u/OrelHazard · 23 pointsr/chicago

The information feeding these rankings is unscientific and lacking in grounding in statistical analysis. There is no measurement of learning, nor of much other actual student experience. Instead there is lots of measurement of easy-to-collect and far less important information such as percentage of alumni who contribute money or the opinions of college administrators collected in surveys.

In fact, when the US News study began, it was a profile in weak study design, producing worthless yet popularly quoted results: all it did was survey college presidents. That this obviously empty practice is what gave us the US News college rankings in the first place should make everyone slow their roll about this "authoritative" study.

Source: Weapons Of Math Destruction, Cathy O'Neill, Crown.

u/race_bannon · 22 pointsr/technology

> make his claims but not provide souce code showing how a bias could be hidden in an algorithm without it being immediately obvious to many coders at google

Because with machine learning and AI, even the developers don't understand how the decisions are made.

You should read Weapons of Math Destruction by Cathy O'Neil, which goes into how biased training data, programmers, etc can result in biased algorithms. It's pretty fascinating.

u/mementomary · 14 pointsr/booksuggestions
  • Naked Statistics by Charles Wheelan is a great overview of the science of statistics, without being too much like a lecture. After reading it, you'll have a better understanding of what statistics are just silly (like in ads or clickbait news) and what are actually important (like in scientific studies).

  • You on a Diet by Roizen and Oz is touted as a diet book, and it kind of is. I recommend it because it's a great resource for basic understanding the science behind the gastrointestinal system, and how it links to the brain.

  • All of Mary Roach's books are excellent overviews of science currently being done, I've read Stiff (the science of human bodies, post-mortem), Spook ("science tackles the afterlife"), Packing for Mars (the science of humans in space), and Bonk (sex), and they are all very easy to understand, but scientifically appropriate. I'm sure "Gulp" is good too, although I haven't read that one yet.

  • "How I Killed Pluto and Why It Had It Coming" by Mike Brown is a great, accessible overview of exactly why Pluto was demoted to dwarf planet, told by the man who started the controversy.

  • "A Brief History of Time" by Stephen Hawking is a little denser, material-wise, but still easy to understand (as far as theoretical physics goes, at least!). Hawking explains the history of physics and the universe, as well as the future of the discipline. While there is a bit more jargon than some pop-science books, I think an entry-level scientist can still read and understand this book.
u/Serialk · 14 pointsr/badeconomics

So I hope everyone has seen the manga version of C21: https://twitter.com/EDerenoncourt/status/1170343228819853313

But there's also manga linear algebra: https://nostarch.com/linearalgebra

and manga Bayesian Statistics: https://twitter.com/tkasasagi/status/1154975832361717765

EDIT: it never stops https://www.amazon.com/Manga-Guide-Regression-Analysis/dp/1593277288

u/metasophie · 14 pointsr/australia

You might need this book

95% confidence with a margin of error of ±5% for a population of 25,000,000 you would need about 385 people. The real problem here is how biased is that sample. By that I mean, do they have a statistically representative collection of people?

u/richiebful · 13 pointsr/Futurology

Honestly, the more acute danger is shitty pattern matching. A lot of machine learning models applied to targeted policing leads to more people of color getting locked up, for example. Live in a zip code with a lot of delinquent borrowers? You have to pay a higher mortgage rate. Weapons of Math Destruction explains this really well

u/RespekKnuckles · 12 pointsr/dataisbeautiful

Also check out "How to Lie with Statistics". It takes on the more nefarious side of this topic. I really enjoyed it.

u/nkk36 · 12 pointsr/datascience

I've never heard of that book before, but I took a look at their samples and they all seem legitimate.

I would just buy the Ebook for $59 and work through some problems. I'd also maybe purchase some books (or find free PDFs online). Given that you don't have a deep understanding of ML techniques I would suggest these books:

  1. Intro to Statistical Learning
  2. Data Science for Business

    There are others as well, but those are two introductory-level textbooks I am familiar with and often suggested by others.
u/blimpy_stat · 11 pointsr/statistics

Applied Linear Statistical Models by Kutner is a far better reference for statistical modeling compared to ISLR/ESLR or any kind of "machine learning" text, but it sounds as though you did a stat masters since you're asking about stat modeling instead of the new buzzwords. The latter options are certainly more narrow.

https://www.amazon.com/Applied-Linear-Statistical-Models-Michael/dp/007310874X
Considered a cornerstone, of sorts.

u/IMNOTJEWISH · 11 pointsr/MBA

You've got a lot of options, so I'm going to throw out a few I recommend, no particular order:

u/ManHuman · 9 pointsr/UofT

Data Science = Technical Skills + Stats Skills + Business Expertise. So, for technical skills, start with Python, SQL, and Tableau. For Stats Skills, pick up 2nd, 3rd, and 4th year stats book. For business experience, work on business projects where use Python and Stats skills to solve them.

EDIT:

u/moraisaf · 8 pointsr/MachineLearning

I liked this one Weapons of Math Destruction.

u/core_dumpd · 7 pointsr/dotnet

Some are downright riveting...

Many are just pamphlets, cheat sheets, or quick introductions - most don't go beyond introductions or very specific features they're trying to push. Some are tied to new books being published, like this and this.

So, your mileage may vary - they're not really technical books in the typical sense though. I'm also not sure why they say 'millions' when it's very obviously 404 downloads (based on the link /u/tommis posted). It seems misleading at the very least.

u/dandanar · 7 pointsr/sociology

Heya!

First things first, it's going to be ok! Lots of people enter sociology PhD programs with no background in sociology (or even a related social science!) at all. So, having majored in Sociology means you should have a much better lay of the land than some of your peers. That said, your classes will likely assume very little specific knowledge of sociology. For better or for worse, Sociology in undergrad is not treated as a "cumulative" subject where students are expected to master material in one class and then apply it in another. Grad school will expect that of you, to some extent, but it will not assume you start with much.

Second, if you are specifically worried about stats, I'd highly recommend reading some very light introductions that familiarize you with the concepts and ideas. Don't spend a lot of time with specific formulas, derivations, or software - your graduate stats sequence will cover all of that, again assuming you know basically nothing to start with. Instead, try to get a feel for statistical arguments, and for the basic ideas of probability, distributions, sampling, and so on. Start with something like The Cartoon Guide to Statistics. Then, read some quantitative sociology. Check out ASR or AJS or other big journals in the field. Find some articles on the topics that interest you and try to read through them to get a sense of how they employ quantitative methods. Don't expect to understand everything, but see what you can piece together.

Beyond that, I'd highly recommend checking out Fabio Rojas's guide Grad School Rulz (most of the content is available as a set of free blog posts on OrgTheory). I don't agree with absolutely everything Fabio says, but his advice is generally solid, and he covers all the important topics. Even if you don't take all his advice, reading the book will help you figure out what sorts of questions you should be asking and thinking about.

If you have any other specific concerns, let me know and I'm happy to give more targeted advice! Beyond that, good luck, and welcome to Sociology!

u/internet_poster · 7 pointsr/nba

I've never read it myself, but I've heard quite good things about this book: https://www.amazon.com/Cartoon-Guide-Statistics-Larry-Gonick/dp/0062731025

At my old job, we used to keep it on our team's bookshelf, along with a bunch of very dry graduate texts in statistics.

u/DevFRus · 6 pointsr/pbsideachannel

With mathwashing and related discussions on algorithmic bias, you guys have scratched the surface of an amazing discussion on bias and the ethics of Big Data. Cathy O'Neil is an awesome writer to follow on this topic. Just last week she released a new book Weapons of Math Destruction that discusses how algorithms are used to oppress and marginalize people throughout their lives and the guise of 'objectivity'. Here is a link if you want a quick review or countless others.

I'd love to hear more from Mike on this topic and the injustices perpetuated by algorithms for the sake of efficiency.

u/pierrottheclown1 · 6 pointsr/AcademicPsychology

Any tutorial by Andy Field is excellent, he was our statistics tutor at the University of Sussex and is one of the best lecturers I have come across. Someone has already linked you to his 'statistics hell' website below. Although you are looking for online tutorials id strongly recommend buying or borrowing his textbook 'Discovering Statistics using SPSS'. It is very easy to follow and starts with all the basic aspects of using SPSS before going into the complexities of the program.

link: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Discovering-Statistics-Introducing-Statistical-Methods/dp/1847879071/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1404320969&sr=8-2&keywords=discovering+statistics+using+spss

u/toham31 · 6 pointsr/slatestarcodex

For a novice who is looking primarily to understand statistics rather than perform statistical analysis, I would consider The Cartoon Guide to Statistics. It is intended for total beginners and the medium makes the content a lot less dry than most statistics books.

u/doodcool612 · 5 pointsr/law

There's a great book called Weapons of Math Destruction. If you're interested in these kinds of problems, this is a quick resource to get up to speed.

u/blossom271828 · 5 pointsr/statistics

The book that you want the person to look up is Applied Linear Statistical Models. It is a great reference book and gets into the nitty gritty calculations for figuring out the appropriate degrees of freedom in some pretty ugly experimental designs.

u/Gold_Sticker · 5 pointsr/booksuggestions

I'm in the middle of reading Naked Statistics which is a pretty good and easy to understand intro. I've taken a few stat courses before and this book covers everything in really easy to understand terms.

I'm also a fan of The Drunkard's Walk which is mostly aimed at randomness, but because randomness is such a large part of statistics it really does cover many of the basic concepts.

Neither of these are textbooks, so they don't get too technical and instead neatly explain concepts. Enjoy!

u/Behavioral · 5 pointsr/AcademicPsychology

I mainly use SAS nowadays, but Andy published one of the most popular and easy-to-use SPSS and introductory/intermediate statistics books.

I highly recommend it.

http://www.amazon.com/Discovering-Statistics-Introducing-Statistical-Method/dp/1847879071/ref=dp_ob_title_bk

u/DaveVoyles · 5 pointsr/datascience

Yes, this x100. I work with so many large companies, and you've described one of the largest problems I consistently run into.


"It's all in the data -- figure it out"


I often recommend this book: Data Science for Business: What You Need to Know about Data Mining and Data-Analytic Thinking


If businesses cannot describe their problem in two sentences, it means they do not understand the problem they are trying to solve.

u/AngryTerp · 5 pointsr/UMD

Read this before you buy anything! I had Mazzullo last semester for STAT400. We did not need a WebAssign code, and it was honestly never mentioned in class, so I have no idea what it's even good for if you have her. This is listed as recommended, not required, for all sections, so you most likely don't need it. Only buy WebAssign if your professor is grading homework for credit through it!

The textbook (listed as required for all sections) is a custom version that just has the first half of the book (which is all that's used in STAT400). One of the later classes requires the whole book. This is the full book, and you can either rent it on Amazon ($30 right now) or "borrow" a digital copy from LibGen depending on your preferences.

Let me know if you have any other questions about the class.

u/Ezili · 4 pointsr/userexperience

I wouldn't describe any of those situations as unethical per se. Bad business decisions yes, but it's not inherently unethical for a company to make a bad product due to crappy or poorly run research.

That being said, if you worked for a government agency with a duty of care, then perhaps.
Or if you were conducting research to be the basis of an algorithm which would potentially have a social impact - like for example approving morgage loans - and were pressured to do an incomplete job which might impact, for example, a particular minority group. But by and large doing bad research is just bad business.

You might be interested in a book called Weapons of Math Destruction which investigates how algorithms and other models used by businesses and governments can have social impact, although I think it's less a matter of user research, and more generally about the topic of poor or limited research more generally

u/commentsrus · 4 pointsr/badeconomics

I work with econ/stat people who are great at running and interpreting models and thinking about causality issues, but don't know much about programming. They've specialized, I get it, but in the future teams would benefit from everyone knowing some basics. It'll also make stats people more productive and help prevent errors. Also also, econ, other sciences, and the policy world really should embrace open source, open science, open access, etc.

But anyway, here's how to do it.

Below are a bunch of random resources. If you're looking for free courses, Software Carpentry has a bunch on the topics listed below and more. The terminal and Bash, Python, R, Matlab, Git, SQL, GNU Make, continuous integration, and data visualization. Data Carpentry has lessons for some of these topics, geared more toward social scientists. Apparently they're developing a course for doing econ with Bash(?). If you're into macro or computational stuff and want to learn Python, can't do wrong with QuantEcon.

I'll echo what the other guy said. If you have a Mac, cool. If not, consider dual booting with linux. It has a reputation for being difficult to use, but Ubuntu, Mint, and ElementaryOS are all very simple and work just like what you're used to in Proprietary World. It's possible to do the following with Windows, but requires a more setup work.

Learn to use the terminal (this is the point of using Mac or Linux, they come with a terminal and unix tools). Here's a decent book on the basics. Learn to navigate around your filesystem, run programs from the terminal, and use a bit of Bash. You can probably skip the chapters on actually programming with Bash. Bash as a programming language is cool, but not super necessary, and kinda quirky. It wouldn't be a waste of time though, since you can do certain things in Bash very quickly and easily. And you'll be a master haxxer.

Check out Data Science at the Command Line for a decent overview of stats programming in a linux environment. Goes over basic Python and R, and other tools to make life simple. There's also The Plain Person's Guide to Plain Text Social Science, geared toward people who do science but may not do programming atm. Covers more useful tools.

Learn Python or R or both. If Python, here. If R, here. If you're into ML, here for Python and possibly here for R but the code may be dated. Still, that book is The intro book for ML.

Learn Git. You should be in the habit of tracking changes you make to your code and the data/results it produces, especially if your data is being shared with anyone. If you use R, here's a great intro to Git and RStudio's fantastic Git integration.

Learn SQL. This one's harder to pick up on your own, at home, since you need a database set up to query. Look at the software/data carpentry courses.

Learn Docker. It makes your analyses/projects more shareable and--gasp--more reproducible (though I've gotten shit in the past for this, so let's compromise and say it helps but doesn't GUARANTEE reproducibility). This one is more optional than the others.

Once you have the basics down, you can do what interests you and learn best practices. Perhaps you want to know about Efficient R Programming (and general best practices). Or best practices in Python and more comprehensive coverage. Or how to make reports and papers with RMarkdown (want to make a paper that looks like it's published in AER? there's a template for that in Rmd).

u/jazybp · 4 pointsr/ProductManagement

I would recommend that you:

  • Find some benchmarks for your industry. For example, if you pick B&Q here in the UK (they sell DIY stuff), I would assume they have a low conversion rate because the biggest use case for their website is to look up an item before heading to the physical store to buy it... vs Someone like ASOS who exclusively sell clothes online.
  • Once you know the delta between where you're performing vs your industry average, I would start to focus on the areas that you're losing the most amount of traffic that has an intent to convert.
  • If possible, do some user research, observe people going through your funnel to see where the biggest pain points and stumbling points are (as Analytics tools aren't going to tell you that).
  • Then make changes one at a time to measure the impact, or alternatively run some A/B or Multi-variant tests to find out the changes that will move your metrics.
  • One watch out to think about other metrics that are important, such as av. spend or % of users who opt for a premium subscription... As you can boost conversion, but you could lower these and you could end up net negative.

    I'd recommend you give Lean Analytics a read if you haven't had the opportunity to do so.
u/MonsterMash2017 · 4 pointsr/datascience

>If you Google KNNL it'll know what you're looking for).

Mine certainly didn't, I got two pages of Karnataka Neeravari Nigam Limited and associated projects.

If anyone else is wondering, I'm assuming this is the book, I eventually found it on a CSU syllabus: https://www.amazon.ca/Applied-Linear-Statistical-Models-Student/dp/007310874X

Not to be confused with: https://www.openhub.net/p/knnl

u/[deleted] · 4 pointsr/Assistance

Found one on amazon for $66 here. Other than that, pirate/torrent/whatever. Google it. Good luck

u/la727 · 4 pointsr/datascience

Are there any good resources for learning more about this?

I have a tech sales background and have an interest in analytics. I picked up this book as a springboard- https://www.amazon.com/Data-Science-Business-Data-Analytic-Thinking/dp/1449361323/ref=nodl_

u/tunasensual · 4 pointsr/de

vllt zu grundlegend für dich, das hier fand ich ganz gut:

https://www.amazon.de/Cartoon-Guide-Statistics/dp/0062731025

u/Data_cruncher · 4 pointsr/BusinessIntelligence
  • The only two books you'll ever need:

  1. The Definitive Guide to DAX
  2. Tabular Modeling in Microsoft SQL Server Analysis Services (Developer Reference) 2nd Edition

  • It's not easy to convert tabular model conventions into SQL. Correct, all joins are LEFT but knowing this won't help you very much.
  • Bi-directional cross filtering should not be thought of as a type of join. It tells the Vertipaq engine that filters can propagate both ways, i.e., filtering the many side will propagate the filter to the one side. Avoid them if possible because they can cause ambiguity. If required, they can be baked into the measure instead of the model. With the exception the M2M bridge tables and a few other niche scenarios, you shouldn't be using them.
  • 600 measures and 30 tables? This is a large model. You have your work cut out for you. Honestly, I don't know why such a large model would be given to someone with limited experience; this is a very poor decision on behalf of management. Given the volume of measures, I advise you:

  1. install Tabular Editor for bulk model management; and
  2. install DAX Studio for model optimization and analyses.

  • Post back here for more help and I can assist with specific questions. You'll find more experts on r/powerbi however.
u/draka1 · 4 pointsr/datascience

I highly recommend Weapons of Math Destruction to understand the impact of data science applied in the wrong way:
https://www.amazon.com/Weapons-Math-Destruction-Increases-Inequality/dp/0553418815

u/usernamesospetto · 4 pointsr/italy

Ciao, libero professionista nel giro delle startup da circa 6 anni qui, in ambito marketing digitale. Per esperienza diretta ti dico di diffidare dal 100% delle persone che orbitano attorno al così detto startup show business. Tutti quelli che sono in questa bolla sono dei fuffari con la passione per il raggiro. Stai lontano dai premi, stai lontano dagli aperitivi di networking, stai lontanissimo dai programmi tv e da tutti gli eventi fuffa del settore. Se vedi qualcuno che ti vuole vendere un corso online offendilo, anche pesantemente, lui saprà il perché. Detto questo ti posso consigliare questo:
Leggi. Leggi soprattutto in inglese. Ti dico che un buon punto di partenza è questo post qui. Poi ti consiglio qualche libro su lean startup tipo questo, questo e soprattutto questo. Poi ti servirà qualcosa per il business plan. Su questa materia ho letto solo un libro che parla di casi di studio e non te lo consiglio (una versione di questo qui), ti conviene leggere qualcosa di più accademico prima per capire come sono fatti questi documenti. In più ti servirà qualcosa di tecnico sul settore in cui operi. Ci sono decine di libri per ogni settore, basta cercare.
Fai. Inizia da quello che puoi fare: puoi iniziare da qualche schermata dell'app se il tuo modello di business ne prevede una, dal documento di analisi funzionale, dal business plan, da una demo del prodotto fisico che può essere commercializzata: insomma inizia a fare qualcosa che sia connesso al tuo modello di business. Scarta l'ipotesi sito web con annessa presentazione di qualcosa che non esiste: lo fanno tutti ed è quello che insegnano a fare nei corsi di fuffa. Prima fai qualcosa e poi dopo lo presenti. Questo fatto che le cose prima si fanno e poi si dicono ricordatelo sempre: il settore è pieno di gente che dice "facciamo, implementiamo, vendiamo" e intende "faremo, implementeremo e venderemo".
Costruisci un team. Parla del tuo progetto con qualcuno, inizia a stabilire relazioni. Se hai un profilo tecnico trovati uno che sa vendere, se sai vendere trovati qualcuno che programmi. Se non sai vendere o programmare trovati uno che ha tanti soldi. Ricordati: per fare una startup hai bisogno di un team perché non potrai mai fare tutto da solo. Ricorda: sono le persone che fanno le imprese e la componente umana nei gruppi di lavoro sotto la decina di unità è fondamentale. Non prendere a bordo parenti, non prendere persone tossiche, non prendere amici, non prendere il primo che passa. Una buona idea è partire da colleghi o, ancora meglio, ex colleghi.

​

u/awesome_hats · 4 pointsr/datascience

Well I'd recommend:

u/bflipped · 3 pointsr/AskAcademia

My favorite is not in my field, but related: Discovering Statistics Using SPSS

u/thequeensucorgi · 3 pointsr/onguardforthee

You're amazingly optimistic, I'll give you that.

I know I am not eloquent enough (or even picking the right arguments here) to convince you.

I encourage you to read Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy by Cathy O'Neil. She details a lot of the ways that the "data" Big Tech gathers to help governments ends up doing a lot of harm. She's way smarter than I am (and it's a really good book).

u/MtSopris · 3 pointsr/learnmath

These are listed in the order I'd recommend reading them. Also, I've purposely recommended older editions since they're much cheaper and still as good as newer ones. If you want the latest edition of some book, you can search for that and get it.

The Humongous Book of Basic Math and Pre-Algebra Problems https://www.amazon.com/dp/1615640835/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_pHZdzbHARBT0A


Intermediate Algebra https://www.amazon.com/dp/0072934735/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_UIZdzbVD73KC9


College Algebra https://www.amazon.com/dp/0618643109/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_hKZdzb3TPRPH9


Trigonometry (2nd Edition) https://www.amazon.com/dp/032135690X/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_eLZdzbXGVGY6P


Reading this whole book from beginning to end will cover calculus 1, 2, and 3.
Calculus: Early Transcendental Functions https://www.amazon.com/dp/0073229733/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_PLZdzbW28XVBW

You can do LinAlg concurrently with calculus.
Linear Algebra: A Modern Introduction (Available 2011 Titles Enhanced Web Assign) https://www.amazon.com/dp/0538735457/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_dNZdzb7TPVBJJ

You can do this after calculus. Or you can also get a book that's specific to statistics (be sure to get the one requiring calc, as some are made for non-science/eng students and are pretty basic) and then another book specific to probability. This one combines the two.
Probability and Statistics for Engineering and the Sciences https://www.amazon.com/dp/1305251806/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_QXZdzb1J095Y1


Differential Equations with Boundary-Value Problems, 8th Edition https://www.amazon.com/dp/1111827060/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_sSZdzbDKD0TQ9



After doing all of the above, you'd have the equivalent most engineering majors have to take. You can go further by exploring partial diff EQs, real analysis (which is usually required by math majors for more advanced topics), and an intro to higher math which usually includes logic, set theory, and abstract algebra.

If you want to get into higher math topics you can use this fantastic book on the topic:

This book is also available for free online, but since you won't have internet here's the hard copy.
Book of Proof https://www.amazon.com/dp/0989472108/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_MUZdzbP64AWEW

From there you can go on to number theory, combinatorics, graph theory, numerical analysis, higher geometries, algorithms, more in depth in modern algebra, topology and so on. Good luck!

u/nyct0phile · 3 pointsr/analytics

“Competing on Analytics” is a classic.

Competing on Analytics: Updated, with a New Introduction: The New Science of Winning https://www.amazon.com/dp/1633693724/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_iDdSBbNABWMN6

Data Science for Business: What You Need to Know about Data Mining and Data-Analytic Thinking https://www.amazon.com/dp/1449361323/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_8EdSBbKH69PFN

u/velos · 3 pointsr/datascience

Don't want to be the devil's advocate here, but I think everyone interested to get into this field must read the book Weapons of Math Destruction by Cathy O'Neil
Of what 'good' DS can do, that has been well promoted everywhere.. Of what 'disaster' it can bring, few would want to shine a spotlight on... Pursue this field, knowing both its light and dark side...

u/CentrismIsTheWay · 3 pointsr/litigi

Rushton, fonte del primo articolo e autore del paper, è la cosa piu lontana da reppresentante della "scienza" sull'argomento. Le lacune del suo libro su cui il paper è basato sono molte, si passa da metodologia e raccolta di dati seguite con i piedi alla poca dimestichezza con i concetti trattati es. l'applicazione della teoria r/K nel teorizzare che la lunghezza media del pene in una popolazione ne determini l'intelligenza media (anche qui la raccolta dei dati è pessima).

In questo mio post trovi studi sull'opinione degli scienziati sull'argomento https://www.reddit.com/r/badscience/comments/7o5hxx/a_response_to_the_alternative_hypothesis_video/


Se ti interessa davvero l'argomento e vuoi dedicargli del tempo ti consiglio questi articoli e libri:

Studio APA

How heritability misleads about race

Intelligence, Genes, and Success: Scientists Respond to The Bell Curve

What went wrong? Reflections on science by observation and The Bell Curve

Intelligence: New Findings and Theoretical Developments

una recente meta-analysis

The Bell Curve Revisited: Testing Controversial Hypotheses with Molecular Genetic Data

Race and IQ in the postgenomic age: The microcephaly case

u/TrapWolf · 3 pointsr/entj

Ain't No Makin' It: Aspirations and Attainment in a Low-Income Neighborhood

u/vmsmith · 3 pointsr/statistics

I dove into this stuff almost two years ago with very little preparation or background. Now I'm in an MS program for Applied Statistics, and doing quite well. Here are some tips that worked for me:

  • If you don't have time to back up and regroup, check out Khan Academy, and this guy's YouTube videos. These can help with specific concepts.

  • If you have time to back up and regroup, check out Coursera, Udacity, EdX, and the other MOOCs. Coursera in particular has some very good courses dealing with statistics.

  • Take a look at Statistics for Dummies and Naked Statistics.

  • Use Reddit and StackOverflow. But use them wisely, and only after you've exhausted other means.

    Good luck.
u/briangodsey · 3 pointsr/datascience

One of the best not-very-technical books on data science in business is Thinking With Data. It's quirky but gets at the core of what good data science is supposed to be.

Beyond that, Data Science for Business has some great stuff in it, but you would probably want to skip the more technical parts, which might end up being most of the book, depending on your interest in that. Same for Think Like a Data Scientist (apologies for the self-promotion).

Medium.com has some solid articles about data science and various aspects of business, but they are scattered and I haven't yet seen a collection of articles that broadly cover what you're looking for.

u/MidowWine · 3 pointsr/Rlanguage

If you need to make an argument for the application of a data science tool, I recommend to read Data Science for Business. The book does not focus on R (or any other tool/language), but makes a compelling case for the value of data science, that aims at establishing an understanding for people not concerned with the technicalities of data science.

u/monkeyunited · 3 pointsr/datascience

Data Science from Scratch

Python Machine Learning

DSFS covers basics of Python. If you're comfortable with that and want to dive into implementing algorithm (using Tensorflow2, for example), then PML is a great book for that.

u/Crometer · 3 pointsr/Justrolledintotheshop

It currently costs $97.70, so yep, the book is cheaper.

u/blair_necessities · 3 pointsr/statistics

https://www.amazon.com/Cartoon-Guide-Statistics-Larry-Gonick/dp/0062731025

If your just looking for a concept overview the cartoon guide to statistics is great. It's easy to read and filled with great visuals and examples.

If you want to learn how to do intro statistics/practice, look no further than khan Academy.

u/svenhof · 3 pointsr/datascience

Good list of books.

I've also heard good things about Weapons of Math Destruction written by one of the authors of Doing Data Science. Haven't read it myself though.

https://www.amazon.com/Weapons-Math-Destruction-Increases-Inequality/dp/0553418815

u/Slippery_Slope_Guy · 3 pointsr/statistics

It requires study so you might not have any sudden moments of clarity, but this is pretty much the Bible of regression.

http://www.amazon.com/Applied-Linear-Statistical-Models-Michael/dp/007310874X


Highly recommended.

u/jcukier · 3 pointsr/DataVizRequests

1 book by far is Andy Kirk’s. Data Visualisation: A Handbook for Data Driven Design https://www.amazon.com/dp/1526468921/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_rjx3DbDVRPFDN

It’s very broad and accessible yet substantial. That’s the book I recommend to anyone who need to read just one book.

2 is RJ Andrews book Info We Trust: How to Inspire the World with Data https://www.amazon.com/dp/1119483891/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_gmx3Db0FDG9DC.

This is a wonderful book that I read as an ode to visualization as a medium. It’s more artistic than Andy’s book both in its topic and its execution.

3 book depends on your specific interest. Dashboards/tableau? https://www.amazon.com/big-book-dashboard/s?k=big+book+of+dashboard.

Data art? https://www.amazon.com/dear-data-book/s?k=dear+data+book

Data journalism/ storytelling? Data-Driven Storytelling (AK Peters Visualization Series) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07CCZPKV3/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_Msx3DbF1GZMG8

Science of visualization? https://www.amazon.com/Information-Visualization-Perception-Interactive-Technologies/dp/0123814642

Visualization from an academic point of view? https://www.amazon.com/Visualization-Analysis-Design-AK-Peters/dp/1466508914

D3js? https://www.amazon.com/Interactive-Data-Visualization-Web-Introduction/dp/1449339735

u/bryanabum · 3 pointsr/IAmA

It sounds like you have the easy part, which is learning the technical skills. The hard part is knowing what questions to ask of the data, it's about identifying the right problems to solve, if that problem can be solved by data, then actually convincing your boss or client of the results.

As quantitative people, we're often too quick to assume that a problem can be solved with a data-driven approach. A good data scientist knows when the data is useful, when it isn't, and what questions to ask. I suggest reading a book called Data Science for Business, it will get you in the right mindset.

u/Dutchess_of_Dimples · 2 pointsr/suggestmeabook

For Economics, I think Freakonomics does a bit of this. As a statistics person, I love Naked Statistics.

u/vinegary · 2 pointsr/norge

Denne er veldig bra:
http://www.math.pku.edu.cn/teachers/xirb/Courses/biostatistics/Biostatistics2016/GraphicalPerception_Jasa1984.pdf


Det finnes også en bok av Tamara Munzner som går inn på mye av dette, men med videre forskning, artikkelen er fra 1984


Boken:

https://www.amazon.com/Visualization-Analysis-Design-AK-Peters/dp/1466508914

u/pmorrisonfl · 2 pointsr/csbooks

It'd sound silly if I recommended this, so let me add that CMU Statistics professor Cosma Shalizi recommends 'The Cartoon Guide To Statistics' by Gonick and Smith. It's hard to beat for getting the big picture.

u/Jimmy_Goose · 2 pointsr/math

Ross for probability. He wrote the undergrad book on probability. It is on it's 9th edition, so you can probably find an older edition for next to nothing.

Statistics for engineers and scientists by Devore would probably be a good book for learning stats as a physicist. I've taught out of it a few times and I like it as book. Again, you can find an international edition of this book for next to nothing.

Casella and Berger is a first year grad text/ upper level undergrad text. You need some mathematical maturity to do use it and it probably goes a lot deeper than you would want. I would not suggest it.

u/ghenshaw · 2 pointsr/visualization

Eventually take a look at this book to get a deeper view of the art and science of data visualization:

https://www.amazon.com/Visualization-Analysis-Design-AK-Peters/dp/1466508914?ie=UTF8&*Version*=1&*entries*=0

This is the bible of data visualization.

u/RogerSmithII · 2 pointsr/statistics

Thanks. The program is Data Science and prereqs are Calc, Lin Alg and basic stats.

I started my review using https://www.amazon.com/Applied-Linear-Statistical-Models-Michael/dp/007310874X but the book assumes you have basic stats. I took these courses 5+ years ago so I only vaguely remember the material.

Good example with hetero/homoskedasticity. I want to make sure I understand things like random variables and different types of distributions.

u/ffualo · 2 pointsr/askscience

It's very clear for a book on mathematical statistics. It also considers the Bayesian (and even Empirical Bayesian) approach. I'm sometimes shocked at what it covers and how well it covers it in so few pages. For example, there's a nice section on the EM algorithm, which most books in the same class don't cover (unless they're huge).

Edit: I should mention... if you're a scientist looking for how statistics works this is the book for you. If you want to learn a ton about regression/ANOVA, time-series, covariance structures, blah, blah, blah, this book is not for you. A great introduction (for all scientists) that covers this stuff quickly and effectively (as well as MLE, optimization, and R) is Ecological Models and Data with R.

Edit 2: If you want applied linear models, Applied Linear Statistical Models is good, but doesn't use R. Luckily formula objects and delayed evaluation give R some beautiful expressivity here.

u/cratermoon · 2 pointsr/politics
u/linusrauling · 2 pointsr/math

>The majority of adults today, even highly educated, do not know basic math.

Yes.

>they rely heavily on technology to do easy calculations

I don't reliance on technology is the issue.


>they do not understand basic statistics.

Yes, but most adults have never seen a course in basic statistics/probability so this is to be expected.

> Do you think this is an issue?

Absolutely.

> Do you think this affects the society as a whole?

Without a doubt. For a little slice of this, check out Weapons of Math Destruction or for an explanation of how Republicans are able to maintain their grip on Congress see Gerrymandering


u/tpintsch · 2 pointsr/datascience

Hello, I am an undergrad student. I am taking a Data Science course this semester. It's the first time the course has ever been run so it's a bit disorganized but I am very excited about this field and I have learned a lot on my own.I have read 3 Data Science books that are all fantastic and are suited to very different types of classes. I'd like to share my experience and book recommendations with you.

Target - 200 level Business/Marketing or Science departments without a programming/math focus. 
Textbook - Data Science for Business https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1449361323/ref=ya_st_dp_summary
My Comments - This book provides a good overview of Data Science concepts with a focus on business related analysis. There is very little math or programming instruction which makes this ideal for students who would benefit from an understanding of Data Science but do not have math/cs experience. 
Pre-Reqs - None.

Target - 200 level Math/Cs or Physics/Engineering departments.
Textbook -Data Mining: Practical Machine Learning Tools and Techniques https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0123748569/ref=pd_aw_sim_14_3?ie=UTF8&dpID=6122EOEQhOL&dpSrc=sims&preST=_AC_UL100_SR100%2C100_&refRID=YPZ70F6SKHCE7BBFTN3H
My comments: This book is more in depth than my first recommendation. It focuses on math and computer science approaches with machine learning applications. There are many opportunities for projects from this book. The biggest strength is the instruction on the open source workbench Weka. As an instructor you can easily demonstrate data cleaning,  analysis,  visualization,  machine learning, decision trees, and linear regression. The GUI makes it easy for students to jump right into playing with data in a meaningful way. They won't struggle with knowledge gaps in coding and statistics. Weka isn't used in the industry as far as I can tell, it also fails on large data sets. However, for an Intro to Data Science without many pre-reqs this would be my choice.
Pre-Req - Basic Statistics,  Computer Science 1 or Computer Applications.

Target - 300/400 level Math/Cs majors
Textbook - Data Science from Scratch: First Principles with Python
http://www.amazon.com/Data-Science-Scratch-Principles-Python/dp/149190142X
My comments: I am infatuated with this book. It delights me. I love math, and am quickly becoming enamored by computer science as well. This is the book I wish we used for my class. It quickly moves through some math and Python review into a thorough but captivating treatment of all things data science. If your goal is to prepare students for careers in Data Science this book is my top pick.
Pre-Reqs - Computer Science 1 and 2 (hopefully using Python as the language), Linear Algebra, Statistics (basic will do,  advanced preferred), and Calculus.

Additional suggestions:
Look into using Tableau for visualization.  It's free for students, easy to get started with, and a popular tool. I like to use it for casual analysis and pictures for my presentations. 

Kaggle is a wonderful resource and you may even be able to have your class participate in projects on this website.

Quantified Self is another great resource. http://quantifiedself.com
One of my assignments that's a semester long project was to collect data I've created and analyze it. I'm using Sleep as Android to track my sleep patterns all semester and will be giving a presentation on the analysis. The Quantified Self website has active forums and a plethora of good ideas on personal data analytics.  It's been a really fun and fantastic learning experience so far.

As far as flow? Introduce visualization from the start before wrangling and analysis.  Show or share videos of exciting Data Science presentations. Once your students have their curiosity sparked and have played around in Tableau or Weka then start in on the practicalities of really working with the data. To be honest, your example data sets are going to be pretty clean, small,  and easy to work with. Wrangling won't really be necessary unless you are teaching advanced Data Science/Big Data techniques. You should focus more on Data Mining. The books I recommended are very easy to cover in a semester, I would suggest that you model your course outline according to the book. Good luck!

u/Booie2k1 · 2 pointsr/datascience

This was an interesting and thought provoking read. Not too long either.

Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0553418815/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_pp5UBbY4DGFYA

u/knkelley · 2 pointsr/MachineLearning

It sounds like your questions are mostly statistics based. This book is a good intro - not too intimidating.
http://www.amazon.com/Cartoon-Guide-Statistics-Larry-Gonick/dp/0062731025

u/clm100 · 2 pointsr/statistics

Honestly, ignore the "for engineering" part of "Statistics for Engineering." They're largely the same content.

How much calculus have you taken? Does the class use calculus?

First, the cartoon guide to statistics is surprisingly helpful for some people.

For a more traditional textbook, you might try Devore's main intro book.

Almost every student finds statistics confusing and it's either difficult to teach, or just difficult to learn. It's also a fractal discipline, since you can keep going deeper and deeper, but it's generally just going over the same few concepts with additional depth. If you end up in a class that's not well suited to your mathematical background it's especially frustrating.

Good luck.

u/RemarkableSprinkles · 2 pointsr/statistics

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Discovering-Statistics-Introducing-Statistical-Methods/dp/1847879071

This book by Andy Field is by far my favorite. His writing style is really laid back and funny, which helps me concentrate as statistics can be pretty dry/boring. And he is good at explaining the statistic theories in an easy way. If you dont want to use spss while learning he has a statistics book in which he doesnt use a statistics program as part of teaching (I haven’t read that one though). He also had books on how to use Stata, R etc.

u/mcdowellag · 2 pointsr/ukpolitics

There is a book which is kicking up a lot of fuss about this - "Weapons of Math Destruction" https://www.amazon.co.uk/Weapons-Math-Destruction-Increases-Inequality/dp/0553418815. I haven't read the book, but I have heard various comments on it by its author and others. E.g. http://www.econtalk.org/archives/2016/10/cathy_oneil_on_1.html

Some of this has been argued about before - if you run the numbers and find that women have fewer car accidents than men, is it OK to charge them less for car insurance?

Some of this boils down to "what this company is doing offends my political principles. That can't be right!"

If you really decided that the government had the right to regulate company choices that involved algorithms and it did make sense, there is still no requirement for the government to vet particular algorithms. Instead you could have a government algorithm which monitored the company algorithm. One obvious way of doing this would be with some sort of quota system e.g. our insurance company will be free to set different insurance rates for different women drivers as it chose according to some trade secret formula, as long as the average female driver was charged the same as the average male driver. So in this particular case of equality, female drivers would subsidize male drivers. Come to think of it, I wonder if insurance companies would advertise more in women's magazines - there's got to be lots of clever ways to game this particular system.

As far as I know there is no link between this sort of concern and concerns about things like the safety of automated cars. Safety-critical software is a very specialized and extraordinarily expensive area, because it is enormously difficult to guarantee that software doesn't have dangerous bugs. I think the concern here is that the software is working properly, in that it takes decisions that are competitive in whatever the company's market is, but somebody has an objection to whatever that winning strategy turns out to be.

u/ablaaw0w · 2 pointsr/BusinessIntelligence

Take a look at Data Science for Business. It covers a lot of other topics and are more theoretical, but I think it is pretty nice. Let me know what you think

https://www.amazon.com/Data-Science-Business-Data-Analytic-Thinking/dp/1449361323

u/buddybjames · 2 pointsr/MachineLearning

You will find it hard to beat "Data Science for Business: What you need to know about data mining and data-analytic thinking". This book is used as a MBA course book at NYU. The book is not full of algorithms, nor does it overload you with complex math. It teaches you how to break common business problems down into fundamental ideas and provides a framework to help you learn the techniques to solve these problems. It's just the right balance of theory and practical knowledge. You will learn about many of the modeling techniques used today with just the right amount of detail. I can't say enough about this book and I'm not the only one. http://www.amazon.com/Data-Science-Business-data-analytic-thinking/dp/1449361323

u/cepherus · 2 pointsr/science

Came here to say this, thank you. I recently read How to Lie with Statistics and this would be a prime example of laziness on the researchers part.

Edit: Bitwise is correct, for all we know the researchers may not be the lazy ones, we wont know unless we pay for the complete article, but the journalist who titled the article definitely is (no surprise)

u/therobotmaker · 2 pointsr/funny

Stats book: $188.39

Physics Books: 4x $69.99?

DEs and Linear Algebra: $151.29

Single Variable Calc: $138.76

Getting a college education: Priceless (Just kidding, you're in the US.)

(Lowest Amazon prices, BTW, not even from the bookstore)

u/Yeti_Not · 2 pointsr/ChapoTrapHouse

IIRC, they already tried this in New Orleans, and before that, with the military (!).

Speaking as someone who has heard a bit about this sort of thing IRL, I'll make a couple of points about this:

(1) It's about the datasets as much as anything else. Ghouls like Thiel will roll out these half-baked products and 'work with' local authorities, and in the process get access to loads of sensitive data to train their technology on. For people working in AI, these sorts of mass public datasets are extremely valuable. So, this is not only about racism, but about privacy and the enclosure of the intellectual commons.

(2) If we don't get proactive, the end result of this sort of thing (also being trialled in e.g. university admissions, and potentially in all sorts of stuff) will be a crappy version of Gattaca. As with eugenics, the technology doesn't actually have to be premised on truth to work as a technology of control.

(3) I really should get around to reading this book.

u/oz0509 · 2 pointsr/statistics

I agree with all of the above. Also, here's the Linear Models tome we used: http://www.amazon.com/Applied-Linear-Statistical-Models-Michael/dp/007310874X

u/a1studmuffin · 1 pointr/australia

This whole mess-up is a textbook "weapon of math destruction"... for anyone looking to learn more about how big data is making the wealth gap wider, this book is a great read.

u/ttelbarto · 1 pointr/datascience

Hi, There are so many resources out there I don't know where to start! I would work through some kind of beginner python book (recommendation below). Then maybe try Andrew Ng's Machine Learning Coursera course to get a taste of Machine Learning. Once you have completed both of those I would reassess what you would like to focus on. I will include some other books I would recommend below.

Beginner Python - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Python-Crash-Course-Hands-Project-Based/dp/1593276036/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=python+books&qid=1565035502&s=books&sr=1-3

Machine Learning Coursera - https://www.coursera.org/learn/machine-learning

Python Machine Learning - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Hands-Machine-Learning-Scikit-Learn-TensorFlow/dp/1491962291/ref=sr_1_7?crid=2QF98N9Q9GCJ9&keywords=hands+on+data+science&qid=1565035593&s=books&sprefix=hands+on+data+sc%2Cstripbooks%2C183&sr=1-7

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Data-Science-Scratch-Joel-Grus/dp/1492041130/ref=sr_1_1?crid=PJEJNNUBNQ8N&keywords=data+science+from+scratch&qid=1565035617&s=books&sprefix=data+science+from+s%2Cstripbooks%2C140&sr=1-1

Statistics (intro) - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Naked-Statistics-Stripping-Dread-Data/dp/039334777X/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=naked+statistics&qid=1565035650&s=books&sr=1-1

More stats (I haven't read this but gets recommended) - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Think-Stats-Allen-B-Downey/dp/1491907339/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=think+stats&qid=1565035674&s=books&sr=1-1

u/TechySpecky · 1 pointr/kindle

that's a good last point. I would like that.

yea it was a text-book for example.

But other books such as: https://www.amazon.com/Data-Science-Business-Data-Analytic-Thinking/dp/1449361323 is $18 on kindle.

u/lukesimm · 1 pointr/Music

I knew what book this was the moment I read this headline. (To those asking: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Discovering-Statistics-Introducing-Statistical-Methods/dp/1847879071/ref=pd_sim_b_2) This is the greatest stats book ever: I failed Stats in my second year, went to my professor, who wouldn't help me out. I picked up this book in desperation, read it, instantly went "WOW." I will permanently have Fugazi stuck in my head now though. Also: I aced my stats text. The moment a lower year friend of mine complained about the stats lecturer, I gave him my copy. Never went to a class again, passed his test.

u/blitz79 · 1 pointr/atheism

Ugh, this should not be a pie chart. uh...here.

u/ViewofDelft · 1 pointr/statistics

Surprisingly effective intro to probability

might be too informal for your purposes though...

u/Aidtor · 1 pointr/datascience

If you want to be valuable to companies post graduation you should learn more about programming (design templates, how to write tests, how to go from a paper to code). I recommend this book as a good starting place. Once you're comfortable with how the different methods work, pick up this book.

u/ChillahWhale · 1 pointr/datascience

Check out Data Science for Business by Foster Provost & Tom Fawcett

https://www.amazon.com/Data-Science-Business-Data-Analytic-Thinking/dp/1449361323

u/TheBlackUnicorn · 1 pointr/AntiFacebook

>“There is a tendency to want to see AI as a neutral moral authority,” Riedl told BuzzFeed News. “However, we also know that human biases can creep into data sets and algorithms. Algorithms can be wrong, and there needs to be recourse.” Human biases can get coded into the AI, and uniformly applied across users of different backgrounds, in different countries with different cultures, and across wildly different contexts.

This is the Garbage-In-Garbage-Out problem. For more on this check out this book:

https://www.amazon.com/Weapons-Math-Destruction-Increases-Inequality/dp/0553418815

TL;DR of this article

  • It's going to take a long time for this to be of any use at all.

  • AI can totally be biased anyway.

  • Even worse, AI APPEARS to be neutral but is in fact biased by its human creators.

  • AI got us into this mess in the first place.


    I'd like to add an additional issue: The same powerful AI tools that Facebook may one day in the future have access to in order to clear up fake news on the platform will ALSO be used by the powerful nation-state actors that are trying to make fake news and bot posts go viral on Facebook.
u/lenwood · 1 pointr/statistics

I'm doing the same. Here are a couple of resources that you may find helpful.

u/KSledneck · 1 pointr/SQL

Im currently a DBA transitioning into a (somewhat) BA role. Its difficult to say what patterns to look for or books to read in regards to that position in the field of healthcare field. But bridging the gap between data and your new role this could be a good start. OH and be prepared to document more than ever have before.

u/itacirgabral · 1 pointr/brasil

>Em tese, de uma forma lógica e isenta. Analisaria de forma fria e calculista todos os aspectos positivos e negativos de cada candidato

Não confie tanto nos algoritmos, eles são feitos por humanos. Reproduzem o mesmo sistema de valores mas de forma 100% automática e sistemática. Eles parte de uma base de treinamento não ideal.

"Algoritmos são armas de destruição matemática"

https://youtu.be/_2u_eHHzRto

​

Além do mais política está em outro plano, não é uma questão técnica de otimização. Por exemplo, o desmonte da educação é um projeto de poder e não um incidente de má gestão. Se o objetivo da classe dominante é explorar e extrair riqueza, o problema é o próprio sistema e não a arquitetura dele.

​

Queremos uma polícia que não seja corrupta?

https://youtu.be/2NYtJ9LrXhk

ex-chefe de Polícia Civil do Rio de Janeiro Hélio Luz

u/agwagsnap · 1 pointr/slavelabour

5 dollars for each textbook found

The first is ISBN-13: 978-0321826237 https://www.amazon.com/Statistics-Business-Economics-James-McClave/dp/032182623X

The second is ISBN-13: 978-1305511064 https://www.amazon.com/Foundations-Business-Standalone-MindTap-Course/dp/1305511069/

u/reeegiii · 1 pointr/SJSU

Are the topics actually the same? I watched the first 2 videos and we didn't really discuessed those in my class (I'm taking Crunk).

I'm struggling with the textbook that was assiged to us and I'm looking for another resource that I could use.


This is the book we have:

Probability and Statistics for Engineering and the Sciences https://www.amazon.com/dp/1305251806/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_zwgxCb29E996J

u/dewgazi · 1 pointr/datascience

Big Data: A Revolution that will Transform how We Live, Work, and Think by Mayer-Schonberger and Cukier (https://www.amazon.com/Big-Data-Revolution-Transform-Think/dp/0544227751)

Data Science for Business: What you Need to Know about Data Mining and Data Analytic Thinking by Provost and Fawcett (https://www.amazon.com/Data-Science-Business-Data-Analytic-Thinking/dp/1449361323/ref=pd_bxgy_14_img_3?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=XSYTKYEVG8W52XART2BD)

Data and Goliath by Schneier (https://www.amazon.com/Data-Goliath-Battles-Collect-Control/dp/039335217X)

Cathy O'Neill's book is ok. It is worth reading, I thought it could have been better.

Dataclysm is great.

u/MadeAccJustToAnswer · 1 pointr/AskUK

Definitely interested me with what you're saying. I'm unemployed but had some very basic analysis experience with Excel in my last role.

A few questions. Hope you don't mind answering. Didn't PM you in case others are interested in this.

  • What do you consider to be the essential material to study to get a strong understanding of these technologies? I found this. Would you consider that to be the sort of material to study to gain competence in this area? (As well as studying the blogs of Chris, Marco, and Alberto?)

  • What steps would you recommend a novice in data analysis do to quickly get a foot in the door? What positions / roles to look for specifically? What companies are big on hiring people competent in these technologies?

  • Can you accrue a "portfolio" using these skills outside of the workplace to get your foot in the door at a higher level? Or would you need to start at the bottom, provide insane value then jump ship?
u/puppy_and_puppy · 1 pointr/MensLib

Weird how I just finished the book Designing Data-Intensive Applications, and it ended with a section on ethics in computer science/big data that ties into this article really well. I'll add some of the sources from that section of the book here if people are curious. Cathy's book is in there, too.

u/ballade4 · 1 pointr/excel

I have a different suggestion - try learning Power BI instead. It is the "next step" from Excel and has a lot of deep analytic and data transformation / automation functionality via Power Query and DAX. Tableau is an excellent (and more mainstream) option as well. Also, you may as well start slowly working on Python.

u/Neltsun · 1 pointr/GiftIdeas

You can try an alternative like FIXD. They work in Canada.

Also, Weapons of Math Destruction is a great read for anyone who loves or works with large sets of data.

u/MicrosoftExcelTeam · 1 pointr/IAmA

There is a great book by Wayne Winston which we pass around to all the new hires. It is excellent https://www.amazon.com/Microsoft-Excel-Analysis-Business-Modeling/dp/1509304215

u/CommanderShift · 1 pointr/statistics
u/Arklur · 1 pointr/PowerBI

Practice, practice, practice. The more DAX you wrote the more you will know...and the more you will know you don't know ;).

By the way, the book you need to read is The Definitive Guide to DAX, if you learn from this book you will know "everything". Another good source is sqlbi.com, you can find useful articles about the language.

u/zzreflexzz · 1 pointr/BusinessIntelligence

Read this book Its a little deep, but I believe its a good start if you want to get into data science. Also, check out the Tableau and Alteryx tutorial videos.

u/leftnode · 1 pointr/PHP

Similar to what /u/Cyzzie said, you are looking for some business intelligence tools. I would start at the beginning and read a book like http://www.amazon.com/Data-Science-Business-data-analytic-thinking/dp/1449361323/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1417617015&sr=8-2&keywords=big+data+business+intelligence to get an idea of the concepts behind business intelligence, and then look into tools like Pentaho or Hadoop.

u/liz11zard · 1 pointr/learnmath

As far as "best" I can't say. It also depends on what in statistics you want to learn, but I agree with /u/solkim that probability and stats go hand in hand and if you want a good grounding in statistics you will also need a good grounding in probability. Having said all of this, and as silly as it may sound, the Cartoon Guide to Statistics is actually quite good at helping to understand and learn statistics (and probability) concepts.

u/TarmacFFS · 1 pointr/reactiongifs

This doesn't present like a well-researched or well-executed engagement campaign, though. I've run a multi-touch product team and I've worked very closely with places like Re-Sci and this is not that.

This is someone who was promoted to their level of incompetence playing business by trying to do what everyone else does. They run the experiment, get the stats they need to make their point, and then use it to justify some new poorly thought-out initiative.

I've had Reddit as a client. Reddit is a clusterfuck. We took our Reddit contact to LIV to entertain them while at a conference in Miami a couple years back and she spent the entire night trying to convince us - and anyone else who would listen - to find her cocaine. It was embarrassing. Complete waste of a table and a night. I've never worked with them since.

u/alzho12 · 1 pointr/datascience

Read this book, Data Science for Business. It sounds like you don't need to code, but need to be able to converse.

u/Geckoboard · 1 pointr/Entrepreneur

I am a BIG believer in the need to make data-backed decisions as business owners and entrepreneurs. With this in mind I suggest the following:

A Field Guide to Lies and Statistics
By Daniel Levitin

Statistics Done Wrong: The Woefully Complete Guide
By Alex Reinhart

[How to Lie with Statistics](https://www.amazon.com/Statistics-Penguin-Business-Darrell-Paperback/dp/B010IKB3WU/ref=sr_1_4?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1521735434&sr=1-4&keywords=how+to+lie+with+statistics+by+darrell+huff - Darrell Huff)
By Darrell Huff

How Not to be Wrong: The Hidden Maths of Everyday Life
By Jordan Ellenberg

Naked Statistics
By Charles Wheelen

The Truthful Art: Data, Charts, and Maps for Communication
By Alberto Cairo

Bad Science
By Ben Goldacre

u/beyphy · 1 pointr/excel

If you want to learn a lot about PowerPivot and (don't mind reading) I'd recommend anything written by Alberto Ferrari and Marco Russo. They write on PowerPivot / SSAS / Power BI for the Microsoft Press. One of their books was recommended by Michael Alexander who's a Microsoft MVP (I think for Access, but he also knows Excel very, very well.) Take a look at a few of the books below:

https://www.amazon.com/Definitive-Guide-DAX-intelligence-Microsoft/dp/073569835X/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8

https://www.amazon.com/Microsoft-Building-Models-PowerPivot-Business/dp/0735676348/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8

I only read a bit of their 2013 book, but it's very comprehensive and of high quality.

I also want to discuss a few other things mentioned here in the comments: PowerPivotPro by Rob Collie and SQLBi. Rob Collie is a former Microsoft engineer on Excel, is an expert on it, and still talks to many engineers on the Excel team. And SQL Bi is run by Marco Russo, who I mentioned above.

u/bbbeans · 1 pointr/statistics

Good to know! As far as a good book goes, depends on what sort of level you are looking for. This book looks like an interesting sort of introand seems to be well-reviewed , http://www.amazon.com/Naked-Statistics-Stripping-Dread-Data/dp/039334777X/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1453406226&sr=8-2&keywords=statistics , although I haven't actually read it.

Statistics is a really useful subject!

u/RedMeGold · 1 pointr/Temple

Not exactly an answer to your question, but I found the book, The Cartoon Guide to Statistics (authored by one of my Temple Statistics Professors, Woollcott Smith), to be both helpful and entertaining.

https://www.amazon.com/Cartoon-Guide-Statistics-Larry-Gonick/dp/0062731025

u/kanak · 1 pointr/statistics

I'm in a similar situation (requiring to be proficient in statistics), and here's what I'm doing.

  1. Started with a really basic book that told me more about the ideas than the math. I used Andy Field's Statistics with SPSS book because it was recommended somewhere on reddit. The book definitely skims on the maths, but it gives you a good idea about the different tests and concepts.

  2. Following Berkeley's Statistics Major/Minor route. Specifically:

    a. Stats 133 - Computing with Data: A course on using R, SQL, and other technologies useful in statistics.

    b. Stats 102 - Intro to Statistics I found multiple versions of this course, but I'm going to pick this one because it uses this interesting book which emphasizes case studies

    c. Stats 135 - Concepts of Statistics : More advanced treatment of the same concepts from 102.

    d. If you want to brush up on probability, you should look at Stats 101 and Stats 134.

    e. After this level, they have a series of electives, such as Stochastic Processes (Stats 150), Linear Modelling Lab (151A and 151B), Sampling Surveys Lab (152), Time Series Lab (153), Game Theory (155), and seminars.

    The classes don't have videos or audios, but they have syllabuses, lecture notes and assignments. So far I've found them to be more than sufficient.
u/LadySkywalker · 1 pointr/fatpeoplestories

Hey now, I've got a masters in applied linguistics. Anyone can do it!. If you're super super super stuck check out this book by Andy Field. He is very good and literally goes step by step by step. Unless of course you're doing the actual math by hand. In which case you just need to go slow and check you're work twice over.

EDIT: Read: I believe in you.

u/reesea17 · 1 pointr/funny

Okay.. Someone had to do it.. right?

Statistics for business and economics ~$131.15 Used and ~$188.39 New.

Principles & Practices of Physics v1 hardcover ~$51.55 Used and ~$164.02 New.

Chemistry - The Molecular Nature... ~$124.00 Used and ~$239.87 New.

Principles & Practices of Physics v2 ~$129.74 Used and ~$126.78 New.

Differential Equations and Linear Algebra ~$79.89 Used and ~$151.29 New. I am the least sure about this book in particular. But for a wag, I'm sure the numbers will work.

Calculus - Early Transcendentals ~$86.03 Used and ~$236.81 New.

So by my calculations your current "TV Stand" cost ~$1107.16. I'd recommend you go to amazon and sell the books you probably aren't ever going to crack the cover on again for ~$602.36 and buy yourself an actual TV stand with a little money left in your pocket.

I do all this because most of my friends in college complained about the costs of text books and then never sold them again. Or did the absolutely stupidest thing you could ever do with a book you've paid over $200 for and sold them back to the bookstore for ~$20 a pop. Don't be lazy, use amazon to sell your books back and the sting of your new found education won't be so bad. The idea is to get smarter right?

u/missjo7972 · 1 pointr/LateStageCapitalism

I'm definitely really interested in that documentary, thanks for the recommendation. The book Weapons of Math Destruction paints a really great picture of how a data focused approach alone can reinforce racism (housing zones and eligibility for loans), create ineffective methods of "culling" poor performer teachers (arbitrary, opaque method for testing teachers resulting in firing) and maintain income inequality. So I'm in complete agreement with what you're saying in the way this approach can be abused.

The biggest reason I think we should emphasize this focus is because curation of information is going to be essential as time goes on and politics, business, daily life etc gets more complex. We're already exposed to so much information, think about now vs. 50 years ago, and cognitively it's very stressful. We don't know what to prioritize. A data driven approach (algorithms) to deciding what information we're exposed to (look at Facebook newsfeed), how our public policy is enacted, what careers we choose- are all imminent. So basically the way I see it is we can choose to understand those mechanisms or be victims the ones who control them. Whether the world is going to magically follow my unqualified advice is another matter...

I just see the dialogue that exists on mainstream media, and I'm just shocked at how simply these approaches could be resolved or at least greatly clarified by a very quick, simple number check. A lot of the data exists in the public database, even with uncertain values such as number of illegal immigrants we have a pretty reasonable idea... seems just infinitely better to say, "Okay, we can support approximately 15-20 million while sustaining native jobs and maintaining agricultural industries, looking at resources etc," then debate within that number range.

I understand that capitalism is a bit cold in the way it refers to humans... hell, economists like Nesbitt calculated the value of a human life... a bit messed up if you look at it philosophically. But I don't see better alternatives with the way our world is structured in order to maintain a certain quality of life and stability.






u/gordo_c_123 · 1 pointr/excel

First, thank you for the taking the time to respond to my question - I really appreciate it. Second, congratulations on receiving the MCSA: BI Reporting badge!

The reason I am struggling to prepare for this exam is because there is no real comprehensive prep course like there is for the CPA exam. There's no "Becker for MCSA: BI Reporting". Can you share how you went about preparing for these exams? I feel like I have learned a lot from edX but not enough to pass the exam and I cannot find any additional practice questions/tests to study - anywhere. Do you have any insight on this?

Yes, the edX Excel course was very good and has significantly improved my Excel skills. However I am still unsure what to expect as far as test questions are concerned. Are they similar to the ones on the edX course?

As far as DAX and M, I assume DAX will be more heavily tested on the Power BI exam then the Excel one. Would you say that's correct? At the moment, my DAX skills are limited because I haven't been able to sit down and really run through it yet - but I will do so. I am waiting for my DAX book to come in the mail. M doesn't seem that difficult but nonetheless I have to run through it.

Again, thank you for your insight - I really appreciate it!

u/AtheistJeww · 1 pointr/poland

Lynn and Vanhanen study has not been successfully replicated so far, their methodology has been criticized and they have also been accused of ignoring high IQ scores from Africa. There's a vast literature, u/humanprideworldwide has already mentioned [this good short reading] (https://www.reddit.com/r/badscience/comments/7o5hxx/a_response_to_the_alternative_hypothesis_video/) on this topic

More in depth readings :

I think a good starting point would be to read this APA paper on the state of intelligence research. It's fairly recent and it should answer most of your questions.

How heritability misleads about race by Ned Block, a more theoretical response to Murray and Hernsein's The Bell Curve.

Intelligence, Genes, and Success: Scientists Respond to The Bell Curve

What went wrong? Reflections on science by observation and The Bell Curve by Clark Glymour

Intelligence: New Findings and Theoretical Developments by Nisbett et al.

A study by Turkheimer et al. about the dependence of IQ heritability on socioeconomic status (ses). Another study by Kirkpatrick et al. on replication efforts.

A recent meta-analysis by Tucker-Drob & Bates for further edification.

The Bell Curve Revisited: Testing Controversial Hypotheses with Molecular Genetic Data by Dalton Conley and Benjamin Domingue.

Race and IQ in the postgenomic age: The microcephaly case by Sarah Richardson

Aaron Panofsky's chapter, From Behavior to Postgenomics, in Postgenomics: Perspectives on Biology After the Genome provides a succinct overview of recent developments on the "nature vs. nurture" debate over the genetic foundations of behavior.

u/Iottiak · 1 pointr/ucf

Well that's what I'm asking for, are there any websites besides the publisher that sell them? I know amazon does, but take for instance the Mymathlab thing.
Nearly half of the people who bought it say that the code was invalid. I'm fine with just getting replacements through amazon's customer service, but it would take far too long and I wouldn't be able to start in my math class.

u/Mines_of_Moria · 1 pointr/marketing

Totally depends on your stat background. If it's minimal id do khan Academy. This is a good into book http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0062731025/ref=redir_mdp_mobile/192-3922040-7644940

What's your background?

u/denvernomad · 1 pointr/BusinessIntelligence

Try this one. It's as good as any

http://amzn.com/1449361323

u/NoBrittanyNoo · 0 pointsr/Eve

So suitonia's stats are now better than "the most vibrant summer in the past 5 years" stats? Numbers can tell any story you want. Bottom line is we, all of us, don't have all the numbers just what's available on various 3rd party tools and the info CCP provides allows us to see. Every conclusion based on partial numbers is not the truth - and let's not kid ourselves; numbers can say whatever we want them to say and follow any narrative. Make up your own mind, not based on anyone's swiss cheese statistics.

I'll leave this right here:

https://www.amazon.com/How-Lie-Statistics-Darrell-Huff-ebook/dp/B00351DSX2

u/Nepene · 0 pointsr/changemyview

https://www.amazon.com/Intelligence-Genes-Success-Scientists-Statistics/dp/0387949860

This book covers refutations of much of the maths, from actual statisticians.

>I'm not sure why people get up in arms over intelligence being one of the things. I mean, some people are genetically predisposed to not being very tall. Why is it so inconceivable that intelligence is connected to genes?

They're not getting up in arms about the idea that intellect is connected to genetics. It clearly is. They're getting up in arms over the poorly proven claim that there are genetic differences between the groups, and that black people are a homogenous group with a low IQ.

And as a result of that research he argued for starving black babies to death. If IQ is a result of disease or nutrition or education then that can be changed, but if it's a result of genetics, why not kill the inferior race, as he argues for with an end to social support?

>The fact remains, affirmative action is up for debate because no discussion should be off limits.

If you believe, as he does, that less black people should go to college because they're less intelligent, that is a very racially charged belief, true or false.

You are allowed to have that belief, but people are allowed to call you racist. The topic is not off limits, just the topic of black people being dumb so they shouldn't go to college tends to get you called racist.

Thanks for the delta.

u/cavedave · 0 pointsr/MachineLearning

This isnt a job posting. I am posting this for a discussion raised from a website I have no connection with.

Firstly these are interesting ideas and seem ideal for blockchain based business models.

Secondly I think the Question at the end about whether these suit men or women is a good one

Thirdly on a weapons of Math destruction level what does it mean to do jobs effecting peoples lives that involve only maths and not meeting the people?

I posted this to start a discussion about the particular ideas and the concept of interaction free jobs and I'd like to hear your opinion

u/Foux · -3 pointsr/SocialEngineering

>A steep learning curve is one where you gain proficiency over a short number of trials. That means the curve is steep.

Congratulations, you've lost all credibility as an analyst by using a technical term to mean the exact opposite of what you were trying to say. Learn the technical jargon before you fuck up mean and median in front of your boss. A Cartoon Guide to Statistics does an amazing job of explaining most of the terms and formulas. If you don't want the book, watch Khan Academy's Statistics Course on YouTube.


Next, if you have Microsoft Excel, enable the Solver and Analysis ToolPak. This will allow you to perform all of the analyses performed in the book/videos. OpenOffice has a similar toolpak.

As long as you know how to perform an ANOVA or solve for a p variance, everything else should be industry specific models/applications and no one will realistically expect for you to know how that company's particular processes work.

u/thisaccountmaybemine · -9 pointsr/newzealand

I disagree - we need transparent and honest systems. If we're going to use racial / gender discrimination, we shouldn't be able to hide behind 'big data'.

> Mr Murray denied it was racial profiling and said immigrants' gender, age and the type of visa they whītiki would all be fed into the data sets.

If you don't think this guy is either a liar or an idiot, I recommend reading Weapons of Math Destruction (or reading about it).

u/Neoliberal_Napalm · -15 pointsr/neoliberal

>Free Trade has lifted millions out of severe poverty all over the world.

I too love misattributing a trend to the wrong predictor variables.

May I suggest some remedial reading material?