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HOME > PAST ISSUE > May-June 2007 > Article Detail

FEATURE ARTICLE

The Most Dangerous Equation

Ignorance of how sample size affects statistical variation has created havoc for nearly a millennium

Howard Wainer

Figure 2. Map of U.S. counties and kidney-cancer ratesClick to Enlarge Image

For almost a thousand years, there have been documented cases of people drawing erroneous conclusions because of their ignorance of how sample size affects variation of the mean. This was perhaps understandable prior to Abraham de Moivre's derivation of the exact mathematical relation in 1730. Yet the pace of such errors seems only to have increased since then. From the 1160 A.D. trial of the pyx to commentary on Lawrence Summers's recent remarks on sex differences in scientific ability, statistical misunderstandings continue to prevail.


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Biography of Abraham de Moivre

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