Sachs, L.: A Guide to Statistical Methods and to the Pertinent Literature. Literatur zur Angewandten Statistik. Springer-Verlag, Berlin – Heidelberg – New York – London – Paris – Tokyo 1986, 212 S., DM 45,–

1988 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 282-282
Author(s):  
G. Enderlein
2020 ◽  
pp. 144-166
Author(s):  
Will Payne

Created by New York lawyers Tim and Nina Zagat in 1979, the Zagat Restaurant Survey brought computer-powered statistical methods and an avowedly egalitarian ideology to restaurant criticism. The Zagats synthesized numerical ratings and narrative reviews from amateur food lovers into paragraph-length listings, eventually selling millions of slim burgundy guidebooks annually for cities around the Global North. The Survey allowed a classed cohort of power users to shape urban environments with their collective judgments, meeting a widespread desire for more extensive information on upscale consumption spaces as the rhythms of professional and social life were changing drastically for highly educated workers. The Zagat Survey was both a class strategy by an emerging professional cohort to assert their dominance over the cultural and built environment in New York City, and a prototypical location-based service (LBS), pioneering many of the features assumed to be inherent to Web 2.0 networked applications.


1937 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-28
Author(s):  
Eugenie C. Hausle

When we speak of a course in statistics one usually thinks of a graduate course in some college and in the non-mathematical person it may even provoke a feeling of awe. Can such a course be given to secondary school pupils? The experiment was tried out at the James Monroe High School, New York City.


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