Statistics and Probability
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A Quantitative Tour of the Social Sciences
Edited by:
Andrew Gelman, Columbia University, New York
Edited by:
Jeronimo Cortina
$109
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Rs.6246
(10% discount)
$98.10
| Rs.5621
| HB | 364 Pages
| 49 b/w illus. 32 tables 63 exercises
ISBN: 9780521861984
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Available for: SAARC Countries only
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India, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Maldives & Afghanistan
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Social scientists become experts in their own disciplines but aren't always familiar with what is going on in neighboring fields. To foster a deeper understanding of the interconnection of the social sciences, economists should know where historical data come from, sociologists should know how to think like economists, political scientists would benefit from understanding how models are tested in psychology, historians should learn how political processes are studied, psychologists should understand sociological theories, and so forth. This 2009 overview by prominent social scientists gives an accessible, non-technical sense of how quantitative research is done in different areas. Readers will find out about models and ways of thinking in economics, history, sociology, political science, and psychology, which in turn they can bring back to their own work.
Contents
1. Models and methods in the social sciences Andrew Gelman 2. History Herbert Klein and Charles Stockley 3. Economics Richard Clarida and Marta Noguer 4. Sociology Seymour Spilerman and Emanuele Gerratana 5. Political science Charles Cameron 6. Psychology E. Tory Higgins, Elke Weber, and Heidi Grant 7. To treat or not to treat: casual inference in the social science Jeronimo Cortina. |
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