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Photo by Glenn Matsumura
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As a graduate student and
editor of the campus humor magazine Chaparral
in 1961, Bradley Efron was suspended
briefly for publishing a parody of Playboy
magazine. These days, his writing is of a different
sort: a monthly column for the professional journal
of the 17,000-member American Statistical Association,
of which he is president. Efron, MS ’62, PhD ’64,
is professor of statistics and of health research and
policy at Stanford.
Newton was no statistician. Consider
the discovery of the law of gravity. Newton was sitting
under a tree one day and an apple fell and hit him on
the head. That’s not statistical evidence: “Newton
just said, ‘A-ha.’” However, if he
had seen 40 apples shoot up in the air and 60 apples
fall on the ground, that would have been the start of
a statistical argument. “The essence of a statistical
argument is evidence that arrives a little bit at a
time.”
Don’t believe that stuff about “lies,
damned lies and statistics.” Statisticians
are trained not to lie to themselves or others, Efron
says. And it’s a good thing, too. Adrift in a
sea of numbers, “it’s awfully easy to fool
yourself, where no one number is decisive. It’s
very easy to start pushing things in a direction that
you want them to go.”
Little boys don’t dream of becoming statisticians.
Efron’s father was a truck driver and a salesman,
and the three-cushion billiard champion of St. Paul,
Minn. “He also loved amateur math, and when I
was a little kid he taught me how to add numbers in
my head, stuff like that.”
They dream of becoming mathematicians.
Efron wanted to be a mathematician, but as
an undergrad at Caltech he found he wasn’t very
good at modern mathematics. “It was much more
axiomatic than traditional mathematics—almost
an aesthetic field—and maybe my aesthetic sense
is a little wanting.” Statistics, by comparison,
turned out to be a good field for a person with a “short
attention span,” as Efron describes himself. “One
of the charms of statistics is that you can peek in
on other fields and see how things are going. I work
with people in astronomy, and I help doctors analyze
their data and plan experiments.”
My, but that’s a big cathode ray tube
you’ve got. Efron’s UNIX server
can do in a second what he used to do in a year. That’s
good, since there’s been a complete change in
scale in the past 40 years. When Efron started out,
he was working with 20 numbers per study. In his latest
collaboration with a researcher at the Medical School,
he’s looking at 20,000 genes for each of 88 mice
in an atherosclerosis study. Because earlier procedures
weren’t designed for massive data sets, with thousands
of questions being asked at once, today’s statisticians
are “trying to figure out new theories, when we’re
not consulting for somebody else,” Efron says.
The chances of having a bike accident on campus
are high. And that’s not just anecdotal.
Efron doesn’t want to get hit, and he keeps statistics
on close calls. “One thing statistics show quite
clearly is that I’m in much more danger from bicyclists
than from cars. It’s terrible at night because
students have no fear at all and no lights at all. I
can’t believe they live to be adults, and some
of them wouldn’t if I had my choice.”
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