Why are Normal Distributions Normal
I read a paper by Aidan Lyon, Why are Normal Distribution Normal?, which is apparently properly cited as Brit. J. Phil. Sci. 65 (2014), 621-649
I read a paper by Aidan Lyon, Why are Normal Distribution Normal?, which is apparently properly cited as Brit. J. Phil. Sci. 65 (2014), 621-649
I read a paper titled Cybercrime is (often) boring: maintaining the infrastructure of cybercrime economies.
I read a paper, Are We There Yet? The Jetsons and the City of the Future by Laura Broman. This paper appeared in Spectator, 43:1, Spring, 2023.
Here’s a 70 year old paper that’s worth a closer look:
Leo A. Goodman (1954) Some Practical Techniques in Serial Number Analysis, Journal of the American Statistical Association, 49:265, 97-112
I looked around and found some papers related to Ruggles and Brodie’s 1947 Economic Intelligence paper.
I watched the Numberphile video Cracking Enigma in 2021 and I decided I had to give that a try.
I read a paper, Skeletal pathologies track body plan evolution in ichthyosaurs, by Judith M Pardo-Pérez, Benjamin P Kear, Erin E Maxwell
Watching the Numberphile video The Clever Way to Count Tanks caused me to look up and read An Empirical Approach to Economic Intelligence in World War II by Richard Ruggles and Henry Brodie
I read a paper, The Influence of ULTRA on World War II by Dr Harold C. Deutsch.
It was published in 1978, in Parameters, Journal of the US Army War College. It was Approved for public release; distribution unlimited
I read a couple of papers dealing with Ordovician period geology and paleontology.
Evidence suggesting that earth had a ring during the Ordovician, Andrew G Tomkins, Erin L Martin, Peter A Cawood, Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 646 (2024)118991
Understanding the Great Ordovician Biodiversity Event (GOBE): Influences of paleogeography, paleoclimate, or paleoecology?, Thomas Servais, David A.T. Harper, Jun Li, Axel Munnecke, Alan W Owen, Peter M Sheehan, GSA Today, April/May 2009