David Salsburg


David S. Salsburg is an author. His 2002 book The Lady Tasting Tea, subtitled How Statistics Revolutionized Science in the Twentieth Century, provides a layman's overview of important developments in the field of statistics in the late 19th and early 20th century, particularly in the areas of experiment design, the study of random distributions, and the careers of major researchers in the field such as Ronald Fisher, Karl Pearson, and Jerzy Neyman.
Salsburg is a retired pharmaceutical company statistician who has taught at Harvard, Yale, Connecticut College, the University of Connecticut, the University of Pennsylvania, Rhode Island College, and Trinity College and has been a Fellow of the American Statistical Association since 1978. In 1994, Salsburg was awarded the Career Achievement Award of the Biostatistics Section of the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, given annually for "significant contributions to the advancement of biostatistics in the pharmaceutical industry". The Mathematical Association of America characterised him as follows
Salsburg's most recent book, Errors, Blunders and Lies: How to Tell the Difference was published in 2017.

Publications

1. Understanding Randomness: Exercises for Statisticians

2. Statistics for Toxicologists

3. The Use of Restricted Significance Tests in Clinical Trials

4. The Lady Tasting Tea: How Statistics Revolutionized Science in the Twentieth Century

5. When the Band has Ceased to Play, American Presidents after Leaving Office

6. Jonah in the Garden of Eden: a statistical investigation of the Hebrew Bible

7. Love Feeds Among the Lilies

8. Errors, Blunders and Lies: How to Tell the Difference