Seymour_Geisser Seymour_Geisser

Seymour Geisser - Definition and Overview

Seymour Geisser (1929 - 2004) was a statistician noted for emphasizing the role of prediction in statistical inference. In his book Predictive Inference: An Introduction (CRC Press, 1993), he held that conventional statistical inference about unobservable population parameters amounts to inference about things that do not exist. (See prediction interval for a small example of the large topic of predictive statistical inference.)

He testified as an expert on interpretation of DNA evidence in more than 100 civil and criminal trials. He held that prosecutors often relied on flawed statistical models. On that topic, he wrote Statistics, Litigation and Conduct Unbecoming in the book Statistical Science in the Courtroom, edited by Joe Gastwirth (Springer Verlag, 2000).

He was born in New York City. He earned his Ph.D. at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1955 under Harold Hotelling. In 1971, he founded the School of Statistics at the University of Minnesota, of which he was the Director for more than 30 years.

External links

  • Seymour Geisser (http://www.stat.umn.edu/People/IndivFaculty/seymour.spiel.html)
  • Seymour Geisser (http://www.stat.umn.edu/booklet/seymour/homepage.html)


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