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Ingram Olkin

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  288
Citations -  79100

Ingram Olkin is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Multivariate statistics & Multivariate normal distribution. The author has an hindex of 79, co-authored 288 publications receiving 74131 citations. Previous affiliations of Ingram Olkin include University of British Columbia & Michigan State University.

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Adjusting P Values to Account for Selection over Dichotomies

TL;DR: In this paper, a probability inequality was used to adjust the apparent significance of a difference between a treatment and a control for a subgroup in a clinical trial when the difference for this subgroup has been selected as the most significant of the differences for the 2k subgroups defined by k dichotomies.
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A bivariate Gompertz-Makeham life distribution

TL;DR: This paper focuses on bivariate versions of Kaminsky's functional equation, which yields the bivariate exponential distribution of Marshall and Olkin (1967) and is applicable to actuarial science.
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Maximum likelihood estimation in a two-way analysis of variance with correlated errors in one classification

TL;DR: In this article, a two-way analysis of variance model with correlated errors in one classification is discussed and the maximum likelihood estimates of the row and column parameters as well as of the covariance matrix are obtained and their asymptotic distribution is discussed.
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Methyl bromide alternatives for strawberry and tomato pre-plant uses: A meta-analysis

TL;DR: A meta-analytic synthesis of information from a large number of horticultural experiments that evaluated the technical feasibility of methyl bromide alternatives as soil fumigants in strawberry cultivation in California, Florida, and Spain found several potential alternatives for which the hypothesis of technical feasibility could not be rejected.
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Multivariate assessment of computer-analyzed corneal topographers

TL;DR: Methodological aspects of multivariate statistical models to describe and to assess data from computer-analyzed corneal topographers (CACT) are considered and the interpretation of seemingly straightforward concepts such as accuracy and precision is revisited.