Old Articles: <Older 381-390 Newer> |
|
Chemistry World June 18, 2012 Paul Yates |
Maths for all 17 Equations That Changed the World by Ian Stewart is one of those books that might not immediately attract the attention of chemists, but which on closer inspection does contain much material that is relevant to the discipline. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2012 David Schneider |
A Faster Fast Fourier Transform New algorithm crunches sparse data with speed |
IEEE Spectrum March 2012 Robert W. Lucky |
Is Math Still Relevant? The queen of the sciences may someday lose its royal status |
IEEE Spectrum February 2012 Kenneth R. Foster |
Review: MathStudio A new smartphone and tablet app runs 300 math functions and your own scripts as well |
IEEE Spectrum January 2012 Mark Anderson |
Data Mining Scrabble Using an open-source artificial-intelligence crossword game program called Quackle, a visiting assistant professor of statistics at Carnegie Mellon University ran nearly 10 million simulated games to discover which Scrabble letter tiles confer the most value to a player. |
The Motley Fool December 21, 2011 David Gardner |
Moneyballing the Financial World Part of what makes baseball so interesting and compelling to lovers of numbers is that it is scored. |
Finance & Development December 2011 Sam Ouliaris |
What Is Econometrics? Econometrics uses economic theory, mathematics, and statistical inference to quantify economic phenomena. In other words, it turns theoretical economic models into useful tools for economic policymaking. |
Sports Central April 26, 2011 Brad Oremland |
Sabermetricians: Help! Baseball, over the last 10 or 20 years, has seen a revolution of advanced statistics. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2010 Sargur N. Srihari |
Beyond C.S.I.: The Rise of Computational Forensics Pattern recognition and other computational methods can reduce the bias inherent in traditional criminal forensics |
IEEE Spectrum November 2010 Robert W. Lucky |
Black Swans What if Gaussian engineering is clear, simple, and wrong? |
<Older 381-390 Newer> Return to current articles. |