Post by ncwebcenter on Jul 14, 2008 20:13:16 GMT -5
Super Crunchers: Why Thinking-by-Numbers Is the New Way to Be Smart" - by Ian Ayres rnrnThis book is a bestseller, ranked #681 at Amazon.com and available for $16.50
www.amazon.com/Super-Crunchers-Thinking-Numbers-Smart/dp/0553805401/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1195154356&sr=1-1rnrnREVIEW
This is a book that surely will inspire the number crunchers! Yale Law School professor and econometrician Ayres argues in this lively and enjoyable book that the recent creation of huge data sets allows rnknowledgeable individuals to make previously impossible predictions. He calls the data set analysts super crunchers and discusses the changes rnthey're making to industries like medical diagnostics, air travel pricing, screenwriting and online dating services. Although Ayres presents both sides of this revolution, explaining how the corporate world tries to manipulate consumer behavior and telling consumers how to fight back, his real mission is to educate readers about the basics of statistics and hypothesis testing, spending most of his time in an edifying and entertaining discussion of the use of regression and randomization trials. He frequently asks whether statistical methods are more accurate than the more intuitive conclusions drawn by experts, and consistently concludes that they are.
Ayres skillfully demonstrates the importance that statistical literacy can play in our lives, especially now that technology permits it to occur on a scale never before imagined. In the past, one could get by on intuition and experience. Times have changed. Today, the name of the game is data. Ian Ayres shows us how and why in this groundbreaking book Super Crunchers. Not only is it fun to read, it just may change the way you think.
Data-mining and statistical analysis have suddenly become cool.... Dissecting marketing, politics, and even sports, stuff this complex and important shouldn't be this much fun to read.
Ayres' book is provocative: Complex statistical models could be used to market products more intelligently, craft better movies, and solve health-care problems—if only we could get past our statistics phobia. When statistics conflict with expert opinion, bet on statistics....Businesses, consumers, and govements are waking up to the power of analyzing enormous tracts of information.Super Crunchers shows that data-driven decision-making is not just revolutionizing baseball and business; it's changing the way that education policy, health care reimbursements, even tax regulations are crafted. Super Crunching is truly reinventing government. Politicians love to tout policy proposals, but they rarely come back and tell you which ones succeeded and which ones failed. Data-driven policy making forces government to ask the bottom line question of 'What works.' That's an approach we can all support.