Statistical concepts in computational mathematics
M. L. Juncosa
Naval Research Logistics Quarterly, 1971, vol. 18, issue 2, 231-242
Abstract:
For a young science and even for most old ones, the intensity and variety of activities involved in computer science are unsurpassed. In an effort to provide the extremely varied training needed in the field, curriculum planners have tended to slight probability and statistics. Rarely has it been a requisite and only occasionally a desired elective However, not only is an adequate foundation in probability and statistics necessary for such external computer applications as tracking and other data reduction, Monte Carlo techniques, gaming, operations research, traffic analyses, etc., but it also plays an important role in internal applications to computer science and technology This effort in Rand's continuing study of computational mathematics and its applications offers a number of examples in various areas of computational mathematics and computing machine arithmetic‐to say nothing of computer design, time sharing, and the like‐to support the thesis that probability and statistics should be a requisite, not simply an elective or, even worse, ignored, at any institution offering a program in computer science. Further more, a potentially profitable source of research problems can be found in the interface between probability and statistics and computer science.
Date: 1971
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:wly:navlog:v:18:y:1971:i:2:p:231-242
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