The Ronald Fisher reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

Ronald Fisher

Sponsorship the way you would do it

200pxEnlarge

200px

Photo (c) Rothamsted research station. This image is not licenced under the GFDL. It is under a non-commercial-use only licence. Copyrights.

Professor Sir Ronald Aylmer Fisher, F.R.S. (February 17, 1890 - July 29, 1962) was an extraordinarily talented evolutionary biologist, geneticist and statistician. He has been described by Richard Dawkins as "The greatest of Darwin’s successors," and the historian of statistics Anders Hald said "Fisher was a genius who almost single-handedly created the foundations for modern statistical science."

Table of contents
1 Contributions to statistics
2 Brief biography
3 Bibliography
4 External links

Contributions to statistics

He invented of the techniques of maximum likelihood and analysis of variance, a pioneer of the design of experiments, and the originated of the concepts of sufficiency and ancillarity, making him a major figure in 20th century statistics. His article "On a distribution yielding the error functions of several well known statistics" presented Karl Pearson's chi-squaredd and Student's t in the same framework as the normal distribution and his own analysis of variance distribution z. Fisher's book Statistical methods for research workers showed how to use these distributions. His work on the theory of population genetics also made him one of the three great figures of that field, together with Sewall Wright and J. B. S. Haldane, and as such one of the founders of the neodarwinian modern synthesis.

Fisher's important contributions to both genetics and statistics are emphasized by the remark of L.J. Savage, “I occasionally meet geneticists who ask me whether it is true that the great geneticist R.A. Fisher was also an important statistician” (Annals of Statistics, 1976).

Brief biography

He was born in East Finchley, London and obtained a B.A. degree in mathematics, not astronomy as is often said, from Cambridge University in 1912. In 1911 he was involved in the formation of the Cambridge University Eugenics Society. His studies of errors in astronomical calculations, together with his interests in genetics and natural selection, led to involvement in statistics.

From 1919 he worked at Rothamsted Experimental Station making contributions in statistics and genetics. In 1933 he became a professor of eugenics at University College London moving in 1943 to the Balfour chair of genetics at Cambridge.

He received various awards for his work and was made a knight bachelor by Elizabeth II of England in 1952. He had a long running feud with Karl Pearson (he declined a post at the University of London), and later with Pearson's son E.S. Pearson. After retiring from Cambridge he spent some time as a research fellow at the CSIRO in Adelaide, Australia where he died in 1962.

Bibliography

A selection from Fisher's 395 articles

(The following are all available on the University of Adelaide website)

Books by Fisher

(Full publication details are available on the University of Adelaide website)

Biographies of Fisher

External links