John Fox
Personal Information
Description
Publisher's bio from Library of Congress - "John Fox is Professor of Sociology at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. He was previously Professor of Sociology and of Mathematics and Statistics at York University in Toronto, where he also directed the Statistical Consulting Service at the Institute for Social Research. Professor Fox earned a Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Michigan in 1972. He has delivered numerous lectures and workshops on statistical topics, at such places as the summer program of the Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research and the annual meetings of the American Sociological Association. His recent and current work includes research on statistical methods (for example, work on three-dimensional statistical graphs) and on Canadian society (for example, a study of political polls in the 1995 Quebec sovereignty referendum). He is author of many articles, in such journals as Sociological Methodology, The Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics, The Journal of the American Statistical Association, The Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology, and The Canadian Journal of Sociology. He has written several other books, including Applied Regression Analysis, Linear Models, and Related Methods (Sage, 1997), Nonparametric Simple Regression (Sage, 2000), and Multiple and Generalized Nonparametric Regression (Sage, 2000)."
Books
A mathematical primer for social statistics
"John Fox's A Mathematical Primer for Social Statistics covers many often ignored yet important topics in mathematics and mathematical statistics. This text provides readers with the foundation on which an understanding of applied statistics rests."--Pub. desc.
Regression diagnostics
Explaining the techniques needed for exploring problems that comprise a regression analysis, and for determining whether certain assumptions appear reasonable, this book covers such topics as the problem of collinearity in multiple regression, non-normality of errors, and discrete data.
The little shepherd of Kingdom Come
Chad, an orphaned boy, had stayed longest with the old man and his son and his girl and the old mother whom Chad remembers as Aunt Jane ("--she's been jes' like a mother to me...") But the plague, personified by its unchecked and insidious movement through the Cumberland, cuts down these four lives, leaving Chad and his dog, Jack, to seek another place to work and sleep. He comes to the Valley of Kingdom Come, and his noble resolve and conspicuous poverty appeals to the childless Major Buford. When the Major learns that Chad is a distant relative, he introduces the boy to the Southern aristocracy and becomes his mentor. Chad takes the notice of Southern belle Margaret Dean, but as gossip of his illegitimacy arises, Chad returns to the hills through the unselfish work of a mountain girl, Melissa Turner, who loves Chad and forsakes her love for his peace. The rumors are untrue, and he is absolved of accountability for deceit. He returns to Lexington, and the Civil War breaks out. Most of his friends and neighbors (the Bufords and the Deans) join the Confederacy while Chad and Harry Dean join with Union forces. Dan Dean is captured and sentenced to death while Chad's military squad is sent to investigate the Dean's house. Dan's life is redeemed when Chad argues the authorities in Dan's defense. Margaret accommodates the quarreling blue and grey forces by directly presenting their contentious disagreements for review. Melissa, meanwhile, goes back to the mountains, satisfied that Chad is happy. "Once again he was starting life over afresh, with his old capital, a strong body and a stout heart."
