How to Lie with Statistics

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 81.73.149.50 (talk) at 14:44, 26 June 2007. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

How to Lie with Statistics is Darrell Huff's perennially best-selling[1] introduction to statistics for the general reader. Written in 1954, it is a brief, breezy, illustrated volume which explains the errors that can be done when describing the results of statistical research, both intentionally and unintentionally, and how these errors lead to a biased or inaccurate conclusion.

Over one-half million copies have been sold in the English language edition. In 2003 the Department of Economics of Shanghai University published an edition in Chinese. The most recent translation is about to be published in [[1]|Italian].

Some themes of the book are "Correlation does not imply causation" and "Using Random Sampling".

Notes and references

  1. ^ "Over the last fifty years, How to Lie with Statistics has sold more copies than any other statistical text." J.M. Steele. "Darrell Huff and Fifty Years of How to Lie with Statistics. Statistical Science, 20 (3), 2005, 205–209.

See also