Atlas home || Conferences | Abstracts | about Atlas

FIMXII-SCMA2005@AUBURN, Twelfth Annual International Conference on Statistics, Combinatorics, Mathematics and Applications
December 2-4, 2005
Auburn University
Auburn, Alabama, USA

Organizers
Forum for Interdisciplinary Mathematics

View Abstracts
Conference Homepage

Size Matters
by
David J. Hand
Department of Mathematics, Imperial College London

R.C.Bose described himself as a mathematical statistician, and he certainly made highly significant contributions to both mathematics and statistics. Each of these disciplines has its foundations in notions of ‘how much’. That is, on notions of quantification, or of measurement. In this talk I go back to these fundamental notions. I explore what measurement means, how measurement procedures are constructed, how measurements can be interpreted, and how they are manipulated to make valid inferences about the real world. The ideas of measurement are so ubiquitous that we often fail to notice them. But that failure carries its own dangers. The world described by measurements is not the real world. Occasionally, mismatches arise between the real world and the imaginary world of our measurements. Sometimes these mismatches can have serious, even fatal consequences.

PDF

Date received: September 25, 2005


Copyright © 2005 by the author(s). The author(s) of this document and the organizers of the conference have granted their consent to include this abstract in Atlas Conferences Inc. Document # caqt-92.