There are various approaches to the problem of how one is supposed to conduct a statistical analysis. Different analyses can lead to contradictory conclusions in some problems so this is not a satisfactory state of affairs. It seems that all approaches make reference to the evidence in the data concerning questions of interest as a justification for the methodology employed. It is fair to say, however, that none of the most commonly used methodologies is absolutely explicit about how statistical evidence is to be characterized and measured. We will discuss the general problem of statistical reasoning and the development of a theory for this that is based on being precise about statistical evidence. This will be shown to lead to the resolution of a number of problems.
Previous Article in event
Next Article in event
Next Article in session
The Measurement of Statistical Evidence as the Basis for Statistical Reasoning
Published:
17 November 2019
by MDPI
in 5th International Electronic Conference on Entropy and Its Applications
session Information Theory, Probability, Statistics, and Artificial Intelligence
Abstract:
Keywords: foundations of statistical reasoning; choosing and checking the ingredients; prior-data conflict; bias; measuring statistical evidence; relative belief inferences
Comments on this paper
Feiyan Liu
27 November 2019
Statistical Reasoning
Very enlightening work!