霍特林与威尔逊论统计推断:地方态度与普世梦想

Hotelling and Wilson on Statistical Inference: Local Attitudes and Universal Dreams

History of Political Economy · 2024
被引 1
人大 A-ABS 2

中文导读

研究了20世纪20年代哈罗德·霍特林和E.B.威尔逊等美国学者在经济学中发展统计工具的努力,他们虽共享数学背景和对概率推断的信念,但因所在大学环境不同而形成了迥异的统计推断方法。

Abstract

Abstract During the early 1920s, a scattered group of American scholars, among whom were Harold Hotelling and E. B. Wilson, started a joint effort to develop statistical instruments in economics. They became interested in disparate topics such as the statistical determination of demand curves, business cycles, yield forecasting, population growth, and many others. Hotelling and Wilson shared much: both were trained in mathematics, both were convinced of the importance of developing inferential statistical tools based on probability theory, and both were at odds with the common sentiment of the community of statisticians contemporary with them, a community that was highly skeptical about statistical inference grounded on probabilities. Their trajectories, however, differed, diverted by their entanglement with Stanford for Hotelling and Harvard for Wilson. Confronted with different local realities, they came to develop profoundly different approaches that characterized the debates of the 1920s and 1930s on statistical inference.

统计推断概率论哈罗德·霍特林E.B.威尔逊