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  1. John Tukey was a professor and an executive. He merged the scientific, govern-mental, technological and industrial worlds more seamlessly than, perhaps, anyone else in the 1900’s. His scientific knowledge, creativity, experience, calculating skills and energy were prodigious. He was renowned for conceptualizing problems, creating

  2. 1 de dez. de 2002 · John Wilder Tukey (JWT)—chemist, topologist, educator, consultant, informati on scientist, researcher, stat istician, data analyst, executi ve—. died of a heart attack on July 26, 2000 in New ...

  3. 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.

  4. John Tukey, 85, Statistician; Coined the Word 'Software'. John Wilder Tukey, one of the most influential statisticians of the last 50 years and a wide-ranging thinker credited with inventing the word ''software,'' died on Wednesday in New Brunswick, N.J. He was 85. The cause was a heart attack after a short illness, said Phyllis Anscombe, his ...

  5. John Tukey. As a chemist-turned-topologist-turned statistician, John Wilder Tukey played a key role in the development and study of statistics in the mid 1900's. The field of statistics has benefited tremendously from his contributions. J. W. Tukey was born on July 16, 1915, in New Bedford, Massachusetts.

  6. 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.

  7. 30 de set. de 2023 · Contributing Editor David Hand has been re-reading John Tukey’s “The Future of Data Analysis”: Most readers will be familiar with the name John Tukey. He is renowned for developing the Fast Fourier Transform and the box plot, and for coining the term “bit” as used in computer science as well as the term “exploratory data analysis.”