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  1. John Wilder Tukey (JWT)—chemist, topologist, educator, consultant, information scientist, researcher, statistician, data analyst, executive— died of a heart attack on July 26, 2000 in New Brunswick, New Jersey. The death followed a short illness. Tukey was born in New Bedford, Massachusets on June 16, 1915.

  2. We summarize John W. Tukey’s contributions to robust statistics, sepa-rating them into four categories: conceptual; tools; techniques; procedures. In robustness, as in every area he touched, John Tukey produced hundreds of original ideas, some brilliant, fundamental and lasting, some ephemeral. He presented them in a rambling fashion, in ...

  3. 11 de mar. de 2024 · Yet John Tukey – who received his doctorate in mathematics at Princeton in 1939 – made many contributions in data analysis including one graphical tool all Green Belts and Black Belts know well. A brilliant man, Tukey worked to apply innovative statistical methods in a broad variety of applications over his lifetime.

  4. Robust statistical methods are essential for evaluating real-world data, as advocated by John W. Tukey in the early days of data science [10, 109]. Many techniques in dimensionality reduction are ...

  5. The paper referred to is “The Future of Data Analysis,” published in 1962. Many authors have discussed. it, notably Peter Huber, who in 1995 revie wed the period starting with Hotelling’s ...

  6. BY DAVID R. BRILLINGER. University of California, BerkeleyAs both practicing data analyst and scienti c methodologist, John W. Tukey made an immense diversity of contributions t. science, government and industry. This article reviews some of the. highly varied aspects of his life. Following articles address speci c contribution.

  7. Affiliations. John Wilder Tukey was awarded the National Medal of Science for his studies in mathematical and theoretical statistics, particularly his pioneering work on broad analysis and synthesis problems of complex systems, and for his outstanding contributions to the applications of statistics to the physical, social, and engineering sciences.