Poem Should Be Irreproducible
Poem Should Be Irreproducible
Poem Should Be Irreproducible
txt
Here is a poem from the Journal of Irreproducible Results due to
Norm Chansky of Swathmore, PA
contributed by Stephen Baker <[email protected]>
Mean and SD |
by | Karl's question to his
Norman M. Chansky | Students:
|
The mean is a measure of location, |
The center of a population. | What are the distributional
| assumptions made by the
If at random a score you drew, | author of this poem? Do not
The mean's the most likely score you'd view. | be misled by the use of the
| word "location," often used
You could compute the mean in your slumber. | by those who prefer statistics
Sum the scores and divide by the number. | without distributional
| assumptions.
At the mean sample scores converge; |
From the mean these scores diverge. |
|
Near the mean the scores are many. |
In the tails, there's hardly any. |
To measure a distribution's variation,
From the mean find each score's deviation.
Each difference of D score now you square.
Sum all D scores, all scores' share.
Now this sum devide by N.
That's V, the variance, then.
The square root of V is called S.D.,
The gauge of a trait's variability.
We've found two moments of a distribution,
Developed from each score's contribution.
Picturing a universe, try to see,
Its center's the mean; its orbit, S.D.
=============================================================================
Here is the poem I (K. Wuensch) received when I asked the BIALIK server at
BRANDEIS.BITNET randomly to select a poem for me.
Plato, despair!
We prove by norms
How numbers bear
Empiric forms,
How random wrong
Will average right
If time be long
And errors slight;
But in our hearts
Hyperbole
Curves and departs
To infinity.
Error is boundless.
Nor hope nor doubt,
Though both be groundless,
Will average out.
Meditation on Statistical Method
======================================================================== 29
Sender: "Statistics Education Discussion" <[email protected]>
From: Allen Herzog <[email protected]>
Subject: Statistics Poem by V. J. Cunningham
The poem by V.J. Cunningham "Meditation on Statistical Method"
being available at Brandeis University (see note by K.J. Wuensch)
is not solely a matter of randomness. Cunningham taught English
literature for many years at Brandeis and poetry of high literary
quality about statistics is relatively rare. To further perturb
us about coincidence. In a very recent issue of "Physics Today"
the poem is quoted at the end of an article on the application of
statistics in physics.
Cunningham who was a poet who left a very small corpus of
work, mainly literary criticism, and a book of his collected poems
published in 1971. He was an epigrammatic poet and wrote a number
of short obscene epigrams of great elegance. The influence of
Martial and Catullus is present in his work. The quoted poem seems
to have been written sometime about 1946 and shows a clear understanding
of the statistical concepts he describes. He has one other poem with
a mathematical theme, some 4 lines about the calculus.
It is good to see his elegant and cynical work brought to the
attention of a statistical audience.
Allen
U50161@UICVM
J. V. Cunningham
========================================================================
After the students left my statistics class yesterday, I saw a
crumpled piece of notebook paper on the floor in the back of the
room where some of my less enthusiastic students like to sit. I
picked it up and was about to throw it away when my curiosity got
the best of me. I flattened it out and found the following
verses:
On statistical terminology
by Cory Lation
End j
Hope you enjoyed it
Peter
[email protected]