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| country = [[United Kingdom]]
| country = [[United Kingdom]]
| history = 1901 to present
| history = 1901 to present
| impact = 1.156
| impact = 1.405
| impact-year = 2007
| impact-year = 2007
| ISSN = 0006-3444
| ISSN = 0006-3444

Revision as of 13:48, 9 February 2010

Biometrika
DisciplineStatistics
LanguageEnglish
Publication details
History1901 to present
Publisher
1.405 (2007)
ISO 4Find out here
Indexing
ISSN0006-3444 (print)
1464-3510 (web)
Links

Biometrika is a scientific journal principally covering theoretical statistics.

History

Biometrika was established in 1901 by Francis Galton, Karl Pearson, and Walter Weldon to promote the study of biometrics, the statistical analysis of biological phenomena; the name was chosen by Pearson, although Edgeworth insisted that it be spelt with a "k" and not a "c". Since the 1930s, however, it has been a journal for statistical theory and methodology. Galton's role in the journal was essentially that of a patron and the journal was run by Pearson and Weldon and after Weldon's death in 1906 by Pearson alone until he died in 1936. In the early days, the American biologists Charles Davenport and Raymond Pearl were nominally involved but they dropped out. On Pearson's death his son Egon Pearson became editor and remained in this position until 1966. David Cox was editor for the next 25 years. So, in its first 65 years Biometrika had effectively a total of three editors, and in its first 90 years four.

Biometrika begins with a clear statement of purpose:

It is intended that Biometrika shall serve as a means not only of collecting or publishing under one title biological data of a kind not systematically collected or published elsewhere in any other periodical, but also of spreading a knowledge of such statistical theory as may be requisite for their scientific treatment.[1]

Its contents were to include:

(a) memoirs on variation, inheritance, and selection in animals and plants, based upon the examination of statistically large numbers of specimens ...;
(b) those developments of statistical theory which are applicable to biological problems;
(c) numerical tables and graphical solutions tending to reduce the labour of statistical arithmetic;
(d) abstracts of memoirs, dealing with these subjects, which are published elsewhere; and
(e) notes on current biometric work and unsolved problems.

Early volumes contained many memoirs on biological topics, but over the twentieth century Biometrika became a "journal of statistics in which emphasis is placed on papers containing original theoretical contributions of direct or potential value in applications." Thus, of the five types of contents envisaged by its founders, only (b) and to a lesser extent (c) remain, largely shorn of their biological roots. In his centenary tribute to Karl Pearson, J. B. S. Haldane likened him to Columbus who "set out for China, and discovered America."[2] The same might be said of Pearson's journal.

Historical reference

To mark the centenary of "one of the world's leading academic journals in statistical theory and methodology" a commemorative volume was produced:

  • Biometrika One Hundred Years, edited D.M. Titterington and Sir David Cox, Oxford University Press 2001. ISBN 0-19-850993-6.

Part 1 consists of articles that had appeared in a special issue of the journal and Part 2 of a selection of classic papers published in the journal from the years 1939-71.

Notable contributors to Biometrika

References

  1. ^ 1901. Editors' introduction, Biometrika 1.
  2. ^ Haldane J.B.S. 1957. Karl Pearson 1857-1957. Biometrika, 44, p303.