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Modern significance testing is largely the product of Karl Pearson (p-value, Pearson's chi-squared test), William Sealy Gosset (Student's t-distribution), and Ronald Fisher ("null hypothesis", analysis of variance, "significance test"), while hypothesis testing was developed by Jerzy Neyman and Egon Pearson (son of Karl).
Karl Pearson FRS FRSE [1] (/ ˈ p ɪər s ə n /; born Carl Pearson; 27 March 1857 – 27 April 1936 [2]) was an English biostatistician and mathematician. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] He has been credited with establishing the discipline of mathematical statistics .
Its properties were first investigated by Karl Pearson in 1900. [1] In contexts where it is important to improve a distinction between the test statistic and its distribution, names similar to Pearson χ-squared test or statistic are used. It is a p-value test. The setup is as follows: [2] [3]
The test is valid when the test statistic is chi-squared distributed under the null hypothesis, specifically Pearson's chi-squared test and variants thereof. Pearson's chi-squared test is used to determine whether there is a statistically significant difference between the expected frequencies and the observed frequencies in one or more ...
The p-value was first formally introduced by Karl Pearson, in his Pearson's chi-squared test, [39] using the chi-squared distribution and notated as capital P. [39] The p-values for the chi-squared distribution (for various values of χ 2 and degrees of freedom), now notated as P, were calculated in (Elderton 1902), collected in (Pearson 1914 ...
The term "t-statistic" is abbreviated from "hypothesis test statistic". [1] In statistics, the t-distribution was first derived as a posterior distribution in 1876 by Helmert [2] [3] [4] and Lüroth. [5] [6] [7] The t-distribution also appeared in a more general form as Pearson type IV distribution in Karl Pearson's 1895 paper. [8]
The distribution was independently rediscovered by the English mathematician Karl Pearson in the context of goodness of fit, for which he developed his Pearson's chi-squared test, published in 1900, with computed table of values published in (Elderton 1902), collected in (Pearson 1914, pp. xxxi–xxxiii, 26–28, Table XII).
Pearson, Egon (1978). The History of Statistics in the 17th and 18th Centuries against the changing background of intellectual, scientific and religious thought (Lectures by Karl Pearson given at University College London during the academic sessions 1921-1933). New York: MacMillan Publishing Co., Inc. p. 744. ISBN 978-0-02-850120-8.