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John Tukey

John Tukey<tr><td colspan="2" style="text-align: center;">
John Wilder Tukey</td></tr>
Born June 16, 1915
New Bedford, Massachusetts, USA

<tr><th>Died</th><td>July 26, 2000
New Brunswick, NJ, USA</td></tr><tr><th>Residence</th><td>John Tukey:Flag of the United States.svg USA</td></tr><tr><th>Nationality</th><td>John Tukey:Flag of the United States.svg American</td></tr><tr><th>Field</th><td>Mathematician</td></tr><tr><th>Institution</th><td>Bell Labs</br>Princeton University</td></tr><tr><th>Alma Mater</th><td>Brown University</br>Princeton University</td></tr><tr><th>Academic Advisor</th><td>Solomon Lefschetz</td></tr><tr><th>Notable Students</th><td>Frederick Mosteller</td></tr><tr><th>Known for</th><td>FFT algorithm</td></tr>

John Wilder Tukey (June 16, 1915 - July 26, 2000) was a statistician born in New Bedford, Massachusetts.

Tukey obtained a A.B. in 1936 and Sc.M. in 1937, both in Chemistry, from Brown University, before moving to Princeton University where he received his Ph.D. in mathematics. During World War II, Tukey worked at the Fire Control Research Office and collaborated with Samuel Wilks and William Cochran. After the war, he returned to Princeton, dividing his time between the university and AT&T Bell Laboratories.


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His statistical interests were many and varied. He is particularly remembered for his development with James Cooley of the Cooley-Tukey Fast Fourier transform algorithm. In 1970, he contributed significantly to what is today known as the jackknife estimation - also termed Quenouille-Tukey jackknife. He introduced the box plot in his 1977 book, Exploratory Data Analysis.

He also contributed to statistical practice and articulated the important distinction between exploratory data analysis and confirmatory data analysis, believing that much statistical methodology placed too great an emphasis on the latter. Though he believed in the utility of separating the two types of analysis, he pointed out that sometimes, especially in natural science, this was problematic and termed such situations uncomfortable science.

He wrote four papers with his fifth cousin Paul Tukey, who was an undergraduate at Princeton when they met.

Among many contributions to civil society, Tukey served on a committee of the American Statistical Association that produced a report challenging the conclusions of the Kinsey Report, Statistical Problems of the Kinsey Report on Sexual Behavior in the Human Male.

Tukey coined many statistical terms that have become part of common usage, but the two most famous coinages attributed to him were related to computer science. While working with John von Neumann on early computer designs, Tukey introduced the word "bit" as a contraction of binary digit. Tukey used the term "software" in a computing context in a 1958 article and this may have been the first published use.

A D Gordon offered the following summary of Tukey's principles for statistical practice:

... the usefulness and limitation of mathematical statistics; the importance of having methods of statistical analysis that are robust to violations of the assumptions underlying their use; the need to amass experience of the behaviour of specific methods of analysis in order to provide guidance on their use; the importance of allowing the possibility of data's influencing the choice of method by which they are analysed; the need for statisticians to reject the role of 'guardian of proven truth', and to resist attempts to provide once-for-all solutions and tidy over-unifications of the subject; the iterative nature of data analysis; implications of the increasing power, availability and cheapness of computing facilities; the training of statisticians.

He is also the creator of the not-so-well-known Median-Median line - an easier alternate to linear regression.

Retiring in 1985, Tukey died in New Brunswick, New Jersey in 2000.

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Articles with unsourced statements | 1915 births | 2000 deaths | Brown University alumni | Statisticians | National Medal of Science recipients | Erdős number 2 | IEEE Medal of Honor recipients

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