2nd Edition

Statistical Inference

By George Casella, Roger Berger Copyright 2024
    565 Pages 54 B/W Illustrations
    by Chapman & Hall

    This classic textbook builds theoretical statistics from the first principles of probability theory. Starting from the basics of probability, the authors develop the theory of statistical inference using techniques, definitions, and concepts that are statistical and natural extensions, and consequences, of previous concepts. It covers all topics from a standard inference course including: distributions, random variables, data reduction, point estimation, hypothesis testing, and interval estimation.

     Features

    • The classic graduate-level textbook on statistical inference
    • Develops elements of statistical theory from first principles of probability
    • Written in a lucid style accessible to anyone with some background in calculus
    • Covers all key topics of a standard course in inference
    • Hundreds of examples throughout to aid understanding
    • Each chapter includes an extensive set of graduated exercises

    Statistical Inference, Second Edition is primarily aimed at graduate students of statistics, but can be used by advanced undergraduate students majoring in statistics who have a solid mathematics background. It also stresses the more practical uses of statistical theory, being more concerned with understanding basic statistical concepts and deriving reasonable statistical procedures, while less focused on formal optimality considerations.

    This is a reprint of the second edition originally published by Cengage Learning, Inc. in 2001.

    1. Probability Theory.
    2. Transformations and Expectations
    3. Common Families of Distributions
    4. Multiple Random Variables
    5. Properties of a Random Sample
    6. Principles of Data Reduction
    7. Point Estimation
    8. Hypothesis Testing
    9. Interval Estimation
    10. Asymptotic Evaluations
    11. Analysis of Variance and Regression
    12. Regression Models

    Biography

    Professor George Casella completed his undergraduate education at Fordham University and graduate education at Purdue University. He served on the faculty of Rutgers University, Cornell University, and the University of Florida. His contributions focused on the area of statistics including Monte Carlo methods, model selection, and genomic analysis. He was particularly active in Bayesian and empirical Bayes methods, with works connecting with the Stein phenomenon, on assessing and accelerating the convergence of Markov chain Monte Carlo methods, as in his Rao-Blackwellisation technique, and recasting lasso as Bayesian posterior mode estimation with independent Laplace priors.

    Casella was named as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association and the Institute of Mathematical Statistics in 1988, and he was made an Elected Fellow of the International Statistical Institute in 1989. In 2009, he was made a Foreign Member of the Spanish Royal Academy of Sciences.


    After receiving his doctorate in statistics from Purdue University, Professor Roger Berger held academic positions at Florida State University and North Carolina State University. He also spent two years with the National Science Foundation before coming to Arizona State University in 2004. Berger is co-author of the textbook "Statistical Inference," now in its second edition. This book has been translated into Chinese and Portuguese. His articles have appeared in publications including Journal of the American Statistical Association, Statistical Science, Biometrics and Statistical Methods in Medical Research. Berger's areas of expertise include hypothesis testing, (bio)equivalence, generalized linear models, biostatistics, and statistics education.

    Berger was named as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association and the Institute of Mathematical Statistics.