1st Edition

What's the Question? Deciding What You Really Want to Know

By David J. Hand Copyright 2026
338 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
by Chapman & Hall

338 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
by Chapman & Hall

338 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
by Chapman & Hall

Statistics and data science aim to extract understanding from data and guide decision-making. However, before applying any analytical tools, we need absolute clarity about what we want to know or accomplish. Ambiguous objectives inevitably lead to mistaken conclusions and flawed actions. This book investigates the deeper challenges of formulating clear questions and matching analytical methods to... Read more

CHAPTER 1: THE QUESTION

CHAPTER 2: THE DATA

CHAPTER 3: AVERAGES.

CHAPTER 4: COMPARING GROUPS

CHAPTER 5: ON THE PROBABILITY THAT X IS GREATER THAN Y

CHAPTER 6: SUPERVISED CLASSIFICATION, MACHINE LEARNING, AND AI

CHAPTER 7: CLUSTER ANALYSIS AND UNSUPERVISED CLASSIFICATION

CHAPTER 8: CORRELATION

CHAPTER 9: REGRESSION

CHAPTER 10: INTERACTIONS

CHAPTER 11: THE IGNORANCE OF CROWDS

CHAPTER 12: BUT IS IT FAIR?

CHAPTER 13: TWO PROBABILITY PUZZLES

CHAPTER 15: THE END

Biography

David Hand is Emeritus Professor of Mathematics and Senior Research Investigator at Imperial College, London, where he formerly held the Chair in Statistics. He has consulted widely, in particular including serving as an advisor to the pharmaceutical industry and working extensively with the consumer banking sector, addressing the challenges of credit scoring, fraud detection, and optimal decisions. For eight years he served as Chief Scientific Advisor to Winton Capital Management. He spent eight years on the Board of the UK Statistical Authority, and served twice as President of the Royal Statistical Society. He is an Honorary Fellow of the Institute of Actuaries, a Fellow of the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications, and a Fellow of the British Academy.

He launched the journal Statistics and Computing in 1991, and has published 300 scientific papers and 32 books, including Principles of Data Mining, The Improbability Principle, Dark Data, Measurement Theory and Practice, and The Wellbeing of Nations. He has received various awards, including the IEEE-ICDM Research Contributions Award, the Royal Statistical Society’s Guy Medal in Silver, the George Box medal for Business and Industrial Statistics, and the International Federation of Classification Societies Research Medal.