4.6 Article

In Praise of Simplicity not Mathematistry! Ten Simple Powerful Ideas for the Statistical Scientist

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN STATISTICAL ASSOCIATION
Volume 108, Issue 502, Pages 359-369

Publisher

AMER STATISTICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1080/01621459.2013.787932

Keywords

Calibrated Bayes; Causal inference; Measurement error; Missing data; Penalized spline of propensity

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Ronald Fisher was by all accounts a first-rate mathematician, but he saw himself as a scientist, not a mathematician, and he railed against what George Box called (in his Fisher lecture) mathematistry. Mathematics is the indispensable foundation of statistics, but for me the real excitement and value of our subject lies in its application to other disciplines. We should not view statistics as another branch of mathematics and favor mathematical complexity over clarifying, formulating, and solving real-world problems. Valuing simplicity, I describe 10 simple and powerful ideas that have influenced my thinking about statistics, in my areas of research interest: missing data, causal inference, survey sampling, and statistical modeling in general. The overarching theme is that statistics is a missing data problem and the goal is to predict unknowns with appropriate measures of uncertainty.

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