Statistics in Geography
A Practical Approach - Revised with 17 Programs

2. Edition December 1985
242 Pages, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
Statistics in Geography has established itself as the best introductory textbook on the subject: the author makes statistical concepts and techniques intellible and their applications in a wide variety of problems comprehensible, even exciting. The main feature of this much-awaited new edition is a set of 17 computer programs (with sample outputs) that cover nearly all the statistical techniques described. These have been carefully written to be user-friendly in an elementary subset of Basic to make them simple to implement on most micro computers. This means students can be more adventurous in their applications and interpretations of statistical techniques. The author has, at the same time, retained all the worked examples in the book so that the reader can gain insight into the logic of the methds by working through them by hand. These, together with problems of various levels of complexity plus comprehensive answers at the back of the book, provide the student with a clear and thorough understanding of both the methods and their potential applications.
Preface of the First Edition.
Statistical Concepts.
Description.
Samples and Sampling.
Comparisons.
Relationships.
Trends.
Spatial Statistics.
References.
Appendix A: Answers to Exercises.
Appendix B: Probability Tables.
Appendix C: Tables of Critical Values.
Appendix D: Random Numbers.
Appendix E: Data Matrix.
Appendix F: Notes for Programmers.
Index.
'... the book is one of the most successful among
statistical geography texts in achieving its aim of a clear,
painless, and well-illustrated introduction to difficult
concepts.' Geographical Analysis
'Highly recommended for its clarity and exemplification
... the author and publishers have certainly made the text
clear, easily readable an interesting with many good figures and
tables, worked examples and directly related exercises with 18
pages of answers and explanations to the latter.' Royal
Statistical Society
'The features I particularly like are the number of
examples and class exercises, the constant attempts to relate each
method back to statistical theory, and the useful diagrams. The
author succeeds at showing why statistical tests have sampling
distributions, produces some outstanding diagrams to illustrate
linear regression, and has a fine set of statistical
tables.' Journal of Geography