Internet and Population Statistics - market research oriented "website for international Internet usage statistics, world population data and web growth information. Here you will find statistical Internet usage data and population figures for over 265 c
The Canadian High Commissioner to India acknowledged that while Canadian investment into India over the last ten years was USD 239m according to official statistics, the actual figure, including money routed through the tax havens, was more like USD 10bn,
Free. provides everything a big, fat, hard-covered stats book does but it in an easily navigable web format. online book. designed and developed by David Lane at Rice University, with a host of helpful co-authors and funding from the National Science Foundation. All chapters include multiple video presentations on such topics as quantitative variables, histograms, and one-factor ANOVA. This is a great find for anyone who wants to better understand the multitude of fields, from politics to plate tectonics, that depend on statistical modeling.
Interests.
Database Systems, Data Mining, Statistical Modelling, Distributed Computing.
Saket joined IBM Research Australia in 2013 as a full-time researcher. He received a PhD degree in Computer Science from EPFL, Switzerland under Prof. Karl Aberer in March, 2013. At EPFL he was associated with the Distributed Information Systems Laboratory. Before that he received a Master's (M.Tech.) degree in Electrical Engineering from IIT Bombay in 2006. Prior to joining EPFL, he spent one year working for an Indian startup.
Dedicated to distilling the world’s data, information and knowledge into beautiful, interesting and, above all, useful visualizations, infographics and diagrams.
As just about every statistics student can attest, Simpson's Paradox — a statistical phenomenon where an apparent trend is reversed when you look at subgroups — is notoriously hard to explain. You can look at examples — say, the fact that US wages are rising overall, but dropping within every educational group — but that don't really help to explain the paradox. But it's not really paradox at all, but simply the fact that the disparate rate at which members of the study join the subgroups isn't accounted for in the analysis. To demonstrate this effect, the Visualizing Urban Data...
The mission of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) is to promote policies that will improve the economic and social well-being of people around the world.
Email marketing & newsletter analytics. Track more than just opening & click rates. Beautiful statistics & reports. Easy to setup. Works with all email service providers.
This is the first of a three-part series called TFIDF In Libraries, where “relevancy ranking” will be introduced. In this part, term frequency/inverse document frequency (TFIDF) — a common mathematical method of weighing texts for automatic classification and sorting search results — will be described.
It has been a couple of years since I posted statistics from WorldCat, so here is a new spreadsheet based on an October 1, 2009 snapshot (see the earlier post for an explanation of the table). WorldCat has changed dramatically...