Tuesday, 10 November 2015

Karl Pearson


Karl Pearson (1857-1936) was a British Mathematician, student of Galton, one of Wechsler teachers, and added most of the ideas and principles used in IQ testing and statistics, like standard deviation, for example. Yes, he is the one who discover it!

Student of: Galton
Students: Wechsler
Time Period: The Great Schools' Influence

Education:
King's College, Cambridge
Admitted to the bar at age 24 (1881)

Career:
In 1884 (age 27) he was appointed to the chair of Applied Mathematics at University College, London.
In 1890 he was appointed Lecturer on Gemoetyr at Gresham College.
Major Contribution

Karl Pearson developed some of the central techniques of modern statistics. In the early 1900's Pearson became interested in the work of Francis Galton, who wanted to find statistical relationships to explain how biological characteristics were passed down through generations. Pearson's research laid much of the foundation for 20th-century statistics, defining the meanings of correlation, regression analysis, and standard deviation. The ideas/principles: bi-serial _r_, chi-square, coefficient of contingency, coefficient of variation, correlation ration, kurtosis, moment coefficient, multiple correlation, partial correlation, normal curve, product moment, scedasticity, standard deviation,

Ideas and Interests
Poetry, philosophy, history of religion, law, the theory of elasticity

Publication

The Grammar of Science (1892)
The Life, Letters and Labours of Francis Galton (1930)

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